STAY-HUMAN
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"The tragedy of the people of Palestine is that their country was “given” by a foreign power to another people for the creation of a new state. The result was that many hundreds of thousands of innocent people were made permanently homeless. With every new conflict their numbers increased. How much longer is the world willing to endure this spectacle of wanton cruelty?"

- Bertrand Russell
What is the point of Memorial Day when no one listens to the soldiers?

What’s the point of Memorial Day when no one wants to learn from history?

What’s the point of Memorial Day when more soldiers commit suicide then die in actual combat?

What’s the point of Memorial Day when no one cares about them when they get back?

What’s the point of Memorial Day when the army purposely underdiagnoses PTSD?

What’s the point of Memorial Day when your war vets end up homeless on the streets?

What’s the point of Memorial Day if the unemployment rate for veterans is double the national average?

Americans who get all patriotic today, please enlighten me. What is the point of your badges and flag waving and what the fuck do any of your soldiers get out of it?

*This post purposely ignores the part where nobody was ‘fighting for freedom’ or ‘defending their country’ nor does it address the fact that Iraq and Afghanistan have been completely fucking devastated because patriotic pinheads seem to be allergic to any mention of that. I just want to know how your bullshit pride and a day of flag waving help your brave soldiers that you’re so proud of, if you care about them so much, why don’t you fucking do something substantial about a system that ignores them or maybe even once just listen to them?

However, if Tarek Mehanna is guilty, so am I. I, too, support the right of Muslims to defend themselves against US troops, even if that means they have to kill them, and I try to give the Iraqi resistance a voice through my website. I have done everything that Tarek Mehanna has done, and there are only two possibilities as to why I am not sitting in a cell with him: first, the FBI is incompetent and hasn’t been able to smoke me out; second, the US judicial system would never dream of violating my freedom of speech because I am white and I am a veteran of the occupation of Iraq.
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I agree with him that much of what the US military has done in Iraq and Afghanistan can be characterized as terrorism, and I support Afghans and Iraqis who fight back against us. What I helped do to the city of Fallujah was terrorism, and I lost two dear friends in that operation, but I cannot hate or begrudge the resistance in Fallujah for killing them. They were only doing what I would have done had a foreign army been laying siege to my hometown. We were the aggressors and the terrorists, and I can see that now, eight years too late.
If someone breaks into your home to rob you and harm your family, logic dictates that you do whatever it takes to expel that invader from your home. But when that home is a Muslim land, and that invader is the US military, for some reason the standards suddenly change. Common sense is renamed “terrorism” and the people defending themselves against those who come to kill them from across the ocean become “the terrorists” who are “killing Americans.” The mentality that America was victimized with when British soldiers walked these streets 2 ½ centuries ago is the same mentality Muslims are victimized by as American soldiers walk their streets today. It’s the mentality of colonialism. When Sgt. Bales shot those Afghans to death last month, all of the focus in the media was on him—his life, his stress, his PTSD, the mortgage on his home—as if he was the victim. Very little sympathy was expressed for the people he actually killed, as if they’re not real, they’re not humans.
With that, my attention turned to what was happening to other Muslims in different parts of the world. And everywhere I looked, I saw the powers that be trying to destroy what I loved. I learned what the Soviets had done to the Muslims of Afghanistan. I learned what the Serbs had done to the Muslims of Bosnia. I learned what the Russians were doing to the Muslims of Chechnya. I learned what Israel had done in Lebanon – and what it continues to do in Palestine – with the full backing of the United States. And I learned what America itself was doing to Muslims. I learned about the Gulf War, and the depleted uranium bombs that killed thousands and caused cancer rates to skyrocket across Iraq. I learned about the American-led sanctions that prevented food, medicine, and medical equipment from entering Iraq, and how – according to the United Nations – over half a million children perished as a result. I remember a clip from a ‘60 Minutes’ interview of Madeline Albright where she expressed her view that these dead children were “worth it.” I watched on September 11th as a group of people felt driven to hijack airplanes and fly them into buildings from their outrage at the deaths of these children. I watched as America then attacked and invaded Iraq directly. I saw the effects of ‘Shock & Awe’ in the opening day of the invasion – the children in hospital wards with shrapnel from American missiles sticking out of their foreheads (of course, none of this was shown on CNN). I learned about the town of Haditha, where 24 Muslims – including a 76-year old man in a wheelchair, women, and even toddlers – were shot up and blown up in their bedclothes as they slept by US Marines. I learned about Abeer al-Janabi, a fourteen-year old Iraqi girl gang-raped by five American soldiers, who then shot her and her family in the head, then set fire to their corpses. I just want to point out, as you can see, Muslim women don’t even show their hair to unrelated men. So try to imagine this young girl from a conservative village with her dress torn off, being sexually assaulted by not one, not two, not three, not four, but five soldiers. Even today, as I sit in my jail cell, I read about the drone strikes which continue to kill Muslims daily in places like Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen. Just last month, we all heard about the seventeen Afghan Muslims – mostly mothers and their kids – shot to death by an American soldier, who also set fire to their corpses. These are just the stories that make it to the headlines…

Tarek Mehanna Speaks Up.

I learned one more thing in history class: America has historically supported the most unjust policies against its minorities – practices that were even protected by the law – only to look back later and ask: ’what were we thinking?’ Slavery, Jim Crow, the internment of the Japanese during World War II – each was widely accepted by American society, each was defended by the Supreme Court. But as time passed and America changed, both people and courts looked back and asked ’What were we thinking?’ Nelson Mandela was considered a terrorist by the South African government, and given a life sentence. But time passed, the world changed, they realized how oppressive their policies were, that it was not he who was the terrorist, and they released him from prison. He even became president. So, everything is subjective - even this whole business of “terrorism” and who is a “terrorist.” It all depends on the time and place and who the superpower happens to be at the moment.

Mr. Mehanna has been sentenced to 17 years in prison for what seems to be yet another violation (by the state) of good ol’ America’s First Amendment: Freedom of speech. Too bad there’s very little for Muslim Americans.

(via mehreenkasana)

Skateistan: To live and skate in Kabul

You can donate to Skateistan’s current project to build Afghanistan’s first outdoors concrete skatepark here: http://www.crowdrise.com/DIYSkateparkKabul/fundraiser/skateistan

I will never get tired of this, it’s amazing. And now there’s people doing similar work in Cambodia too. Helping street kids, especially girls, through skateboarding, who’d have thought XP

Skateboarding in Cambodia

animal-chin:

Respect.

I love Skateistan. They did some amazing work helping out the youth in Afghanistan (click here). Apparently now they’re growing to other countries as well, it’s great XP

“The Bad Guys”

docshoesoapbox:

Question: Do you believe there has ever existed a country in which every single person—man, woman, and child—deserved to die?

Unless you’re a racist asshole, the answer should be: “No.”

And yet some people really do think that way.  Just last Thanksgiving I had to sit and listen to my own father (who has never served in the military, by the way) shoot off at the mouth about how we “need to just kill all the Muslims.”

What’s worse is, a lot of people seem to feel that way.  To my deep shame, I had to sit there with my girlfriend and listen while members of my own family agreed with this horseshit. 

As the only person in the room who’d actually been to the Middle East, met a great many Muslims and befriended a few, and served in our botched War On Terror, I felt I had a responsibility to speak up.  So I said a few things that should have been obvious.  How genocide is wrong.  How religious intolerance is wrong.  That almost all the people I met Over There were good, decent people who just want to live their lives in peace without getting bombs dropped on them, and that really doesn’t seem like too much to ask for.

The men grumbled, mentioned again that I’m the token Hippie of the family, and I think my Dad muttered something about how I must have picked up these crazy ideas in college or during my time living in San Francisco.  As if I’d said something utterly senseless and he had to find an excuse for my obvious wrongheadedness.  At this point my aunts rushed in to change the subject. 

They’re very good at changing the subject.  To this day I haven’t been able to have an honest conversation about Iraq with my family.  Haven’t been able, or perhaps haven’t been allowed to.

Getting back to the point: I may have picked an extreme example, but the problem is that most Americans—and probably most people throughout the world—are raised to think this way.  When we send children to their history classes and teach them about past wars, we always describe those wars in terms of The Good Guys vs. The Bad Guys.  Us vs. Them.  But the world is far more complicated than that.  Unless, of course, you believe that every single German soldier killed in World War Two was a mass-murdering Nazi with no respect for human life.

Which isn’t true.  Your average German soldier was just another poor farm-boy, drafted into a madman’s war.

Those Soviet troops we were taught to fear during the Cold War?  Again, I’d bet most of them were just poor draftees.

How about the Indian Wars?  Remember cheering at the movies whenever John Wayne shot another red man?  Those Native Americans were just some young men defending their homeland.  Read Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee sometime.  If anyone was the “bad guy” in that situation, it was John Wayne for fuck’s sake.

I believe I can speak with some experience of your average “terrorist.”  He’s a guy living in the middle of nowhere.  He’s poorer than you can imagine.  He’s got kids to feed.  And one day some asshole with a bomb offers to pay him twenty dollars to dig a hole in the road.  Our “terrorist” knows the man who hired him will probably plant a bomb in that hole to kill Americans, but he needs the money, and he’s afraid what will happen to him if he says no, and he doesn’t like what these American soldiers have done to his country anyhow, so he takes the job.  Next thing he knows, he’s being tortured in Guantanamo Bay.

Does that poor man really sound like a homicidal maniac to you?  Do you think this “terrorist” deserves to die?  Yes, I understand that there are some genuinely awful men in the world who do terrible, inhuman things.  I’ve met a few of those guys, too.  But most of the “terrorists” I met were just poor bastards stuck in the wrong place at the wrong time.

And if you can empathize with that “terrorist,” then what about your average law-abiding Iraqi citizen who just saw his home blown to pieces?  Does it really make any difference to him if the bomber was American or Al Quaeda?  Either way, his home is gone, and he’s got a right to be angry about that.  You can see how he might not be very happy with us.

I spoke of “terrorists,” but I can speak even more confidently of your average American soldier.  He’s a poor kid who’s been misled.  He’s been taught since earliest childhood that war is noble, that war is romantic, that war is Right, especially when America goes to war.  Your average American soldier is a child that has been brainwashed and handed a gun and turned loose in a hostile land.  He’s a good kid tricked into doing terrible things. 

God forbid he should learn the error of his ways.  Soldiers who refuse orders have a way of disappearing.  Just look at Private Bradley Manning.  You can be sent to prison—military prison, where you’ll break big rocks into little rocks for the next few decades.  Politicians and the media will vilify you.  You’ll be ostracized by your fellow soldiers, your friends, even your own family.  You’ll be dishonorably discharged, and not even McDonald’s will hire you.  You’ll be branded a Traitor, the lowest form of human scum, and it would be better for you if you were born dead.  And it goes without saying that the war you protested will go on, bloody as ever, with or without your cooperation.

So, yeah.  I had my doubts about our War On Terror.  But I continued to follow orders until I finally (finally!) got an opportunity to leave active duty and go back home.  Perhaps some of you think that’s not enough, that I should have thrown down my rifle and my aid bag and martyred myself.  That my failure to do so makes me the Bad Guy. 

And if that’s the way you feel, you need to grow the hell up.

If you’re so immature that you think of war in terms of The Good Guys vs. The Bad Guys, you’re likely to think that all Iraqis are bloodthirsty terrorists, or that all American soldiers are inhuman baby-killers.  And either way, you’re wrong.

We’re all adults here.  We should know better.

But apparently we don’t.  Just watch five minutes of Fox News and you’ll see highly paid pundits talking about war in terms of Us vs. Them.  Good and Evil. 

Our political leaders talk this way, too.  Either they’re condescending to us, talking to us like we’re children, or they’re damn fool enough to think that way.  And we’re damn fool enough to elect them.

People who talk like that are far guiltier than your average enemy soldier.  It’s that sort of political language that dehumanizes people and allows us to kill thousands of people overseas and still sleep at night. 

If you’re dumb enough to think that way, you need to shut the fuck up when grown folks are talking.

Everybody just needs to read every post on this blog.

You need to follow this blog: Doc Shoe's Soap Box

docshoe:

This blog is dedicated to my love of music, but every now and then I have to shoot my mouth off on certain subjects, usually related to war and politics.  (Like this piece called “Why We’re At War,” or this rant about the GOP’s inflamed rhetoric about Iran.)  Because of this, many of you already know that I served two deployments to Iraq as a combat medic. 

Which puts me into an awkward position.  I love talking with folks on Tumblr, but I always get asked about Iraq.  Which is understandable: Because we’ve got a supposedly all-volunteer military during an unpopular war, most people don’t personally know anyone who served in our botched War On Terror.  And because many people don’t trust the media or their political leaders to tell them the truth, the few of us who served get asked a lot of questions.

But I started this blog because I want to talk about music.  I often would rather not talk about Iraq.  Just a few hours ago a really cool blogger from Russia ruined a perfectly good conversation about Lou Reed by bringing up American politics, and it all went downhill from there.

It’s not that I don’t want to talk about the war, I do, just not necessarily all the time.  But I do want to talk about it now and then.  I think it’s shameful that so many Americans pretend there is no war, so I respect anyone who’s willing to talk about it and ask questions.  It’s just that it’s a very frustrating topic for me and I don’t want to talk about it all the time, especially not when I’m stoned and posting songs on my Music Blog.

So tell you what: I’m starting another blog, called Doc Shoe’s Soap Box.  Through this blog I’ll be willing to field any questions about politics, the War On Terror, or my own personal experiences in Iraq.  I’ll use that blog to vent my feelings about War and Politics and Other Frustrating Shit.

Partly because people keep telling me that this is what I and other veterans should do.  But also because when I’m working on this blog, I want to talk about music, dammit.

But if you want to talk about war, well, now you know where to find me.

Keep on rockin’ in the Free World, folks—

Doc Shoe

omg omg omg omg omg

Yes. This is good.

No one asked their names.

In the days following the rogue US soldier’s shooting spree in Kandahar, most of the media, us included, focused on the “backlash” and how it might further strain the relations with the US.

Many mainstream media outlets channelled a significant amount of  energy into uncovering the slightest detail about the accused soldier – now identified as Staff Sergeant Robert Bales. We even know where his wife wanted to go for vacation, or what she said on her personal blog.

But the victims became a footnote, an anonymous footnote. Just the number 16. No one bothered to ask their ages, their hobbies, their aspirations. Worst of all, no one bothered to ask their names.

In honoring their memory, I write their names below, and the little we know about them: that nine of them were children, three were women.

The dead:
Mohamed Dawood son of  Abdullah
Khudaydad son of Mohamed Juma
Nazar Mohamed 
Payendo
Robeena
Shatarina daughter of Sultan Mohamed
Zahra daughter of Abdul Hamid
Nazia daughter of Dost Mohamed
Masooma daughter of Mohamed Wazir 
Farida daughter of Mohamed Wazir
Palwasha daughter of Mohamed Wazir
Nabia daughter of Mohamed Wazir
Esmatullah daughter of Mohamed Wazir
Faizullah son of Mohamed Wazir
Essa Mohamed son of Mohamed Hussain
Akhtar Mohamed son of Murrad Ali 
 
The wounded:
Haji Mohamed Naim son of Haji Sakhawat
Mohamed Sediq son of Mohamed Naim
Parween
Rafiullah
Zardana
Zulheja

Anonymous : So I heard that the US soldier may/will not get a trial in Afghanistan, does the U.S really have the power to do that? I read about a murder in Spain where a U.S girl had been found guilty of killing her roommate, but the U.S took her back home. How?

I don’t know about the other case you mentioned, so I can’t say anything about that.

I’m going to answer your question with a question; You’re asking me how the U.S. has the power to do that, I’m asking you how on earth war torn, poverty ridden, occupied (and it is an occupation) Afghanistan is supposed to stop their occupiers from whisking away a soldier of theirs who they (the US) claim to be mentally deranged? They asked for him to be tried in Afghanistan, what more can they do when the US had already sent the soldier to Kuwait ASAP so that he could be sent home?

Something you might find interesting: An Afghan parliamentary investigation team has implicated up to 20 US troops in the massacre of 16 civilians in Kandahar early on Sunday morning. It contradicts NATO’s account that insists one rogue soldier was behind the slaughter.

Up to 20 US troops behind Kandahar bloodbath – Afghan probe

17th March, 2012

An Afghan parliamentary investigation team has implicated up to 20 US troops in the massacre of 16 civilians in Kandahar early on Sunday morning. It contradicts NATO’s account that insists one rogue soldier was behind the slaughter.

­The team of Afghan lawmakers has spent two days collating reports from witnesses, survivors and inhabitants of the villages where the tragedy took place.

“We are convinced that one soldier cannot kill so many people in two villages within one hour at the same time, and the 16 civilians, most of them children and women, have been killed by the two groups,” investigator Hamizai Lali told Afghan News.

Lali also said their investigations led them to believe 15 to 20 US soldiers had been involved in the killings. He appealed to the international community to ensure that the responsible parties were brought to justice, stressing the Afghan parliament would not rest until the killers were prosecuted.

“If the international community does not play its role in punishing the perpetrators, the Wolesi Jirga [parliament] would declare foreign troops as occupying forces,” he said.

The head of the Afghan parliamentary investigation, Sayed Ishaq Gillani, told the BBC that witnesses report seeing helicopters dropping chaff during the attack, a measure used to hide targets from ground attack.

Gillani added that locals suspect the massacre was revenge for attacks carried out last week on US forces that left several injured.

In response to the massacre Afghan PM Hamid Karzai called for US troops to quit Afghan villages and confine themselves to their military bases across the country. Furthermore, the Taliban announced that talks with US forces would be suspended.

Meanwhile the US military has detained one soldier in connection with the massacre and transferred him to Kuwait amid outcry for a public trial in Afghanistan. Currently, the soldier is being flown to Kansas base, AFP reported.

US authorities are currently conducting an investigation into the motives behind the attack, but maintain that the soldier’s trial must be dealt with by the US legal system.

It is believed that the soldier may have had alcohol problems and been suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.

Afghanistan: The dead just keep piling up

After an American soldier killed 16 Afghan civilians, the US apologises - but will probably not learn its lesson.

Marth 13th, 2012

It’s a well-worn ritual - the expression of outrage and “shock”, as President Obama put it. The “condolences to the families” offered by senior leaders of the occupying power to the latest victims of their supposedly benign occupation.

Of course the action in question - which is always the latest in a whole series of actions, with the previous ones conveniently forgotten by the time the next one happens - can “not represent the exceptional character of our military and the respect that [we have] for the people of Afghanistan”. “We” don’t do that. That’s what “they” - the people whom we have occupied/sent soldiers into Afghanistan/Iraq/Pakistan/Yemen/ to destroy - do. They are the barbarians who hate us because of “our values”, as President Bush so eloquently put it.

We will urge calm and investigate - just like we’re investigating the burning of Qurans, urinating on dead fighters and mutilating dead children, and all the other insults and injuries upon Afghans, Pakistanis, Iraqis and other benighted peoples. Those responsible for the deaths will face justice, or whatever we say is justice, unless of course a military court somehow determines justice to be something else than we told you it would be, in which case that is just another example of how fair our system of jurisprudence is.

Compensation will be paid to the families of the dead and injured, although not too much compensation. Certainly not more than the cost of one or two Hellfire missiles, or the salary of one of the mercenaries to whom we pay three to four times the wages of a soldier so that we can say we’re reducing the number of “troops” in your country. In fact, we’ll pay as little as possible, as low as $100 a head, if you’ll take it.

Imperial hypocrisy

Say what you want about Israel, at least it doesn’t pretend to “respect” Palestinians. The whole “shooting and crying” act went out of style by the time the al-Aqsa intifada erupted. But Israel/Palestine is an old-fashioned ethno-territorial conflict. It’s hard to keep pretending you respect someone whose territory you’re violently taking over and resettling with your own people; and when you have as much power as Israel does compared with its foe, after a while why even bother? “We have exacted from them a very high price,” Prime Minister Netanyahu said bluntly, after the latest Israeli attack in Gaza killed several militants along with a 55-year-old man and a schoolboy. “Naturally, we will act as necessary;” collateral damage no longer requires an apology.

The Obama administration is in a far tougher situation. It can’t afford to appear too imperialist, precisely because it is enmeshed in a series of ongoing military engagements across the Muslim world. Yet even though well over 50 per cent of Americans oppose the continued US presence in Afghanistan, and even if the president is sincere in his stated desire to withdraw combat forces from Afghanistan as soon as possible, the huge American military footprint across the region will not easily shrink.

The dozens of military bases serve the same purpose for the perpetuation of American empire as colonies once did for the British and the French. Along with the bases come well over 100,000 troops, at least two carrier groups and untold tens of billions of dollars worth weapons and security relationships with local regimes.

Just as importantly, the corrupt and authoritarian nature of the regimes the US must deal with - if they were honest and democratic, the US wouldn’t be allowed in the door - makes the situation even worse, as their own interest in holding onto power will trump taking any action that might lead to a US withdrawal from their territory, except on their own terms.

In Afghanistan in particular, the government that the US put into power has been so endemically corrupt that its own actions only exacerbate the enmity of most Afghans towards Americans.

But neither Afghanistan’s internal problems nor the intense violence of the Taliban account for why American troops - like every other occupying force in history - so routinely behave inhumanely towards the occupied population.

Strategic forgetting

In a fascinating but sadly overlooked Washington Post op-ed early this year, MIT professor John Tirman attempted to explain why Americans have shown so little concern for the civilians of other countries killed on their behalf. He pointed out a number of reasons, including the self-perception that such behaviour is so outside the norms of American morality that it can only be an aberration, and the absence of civilians from films, novels and documentaries about the wars.

The entertainment industry almost always focuses on Americans. The latest film from the military-entertainment complex, Act of Valor, thoroughly embedded actors with the military’s most elite killers for video game-style mayhem. Accordingly, most Americans too have no reason to consider the reality of the violence in which soldiers are engaged.

Perhaps most important, as Tirman points out, is that frontier countries like the US have a long history of conquest, killing and oppressing indigenous peoples at home. Quoting a Wall Street Journal article by Robert Kaplan, he argues that “the red Indian metaphor is one with which a liberal policy nomenklatura may be uncomfortable, but Army and Marine field officers have embraced it because it captures perfectly the combat challenge of the early 21st century”.

If Americans have yet to begin to own up to the genocide of the native peoples of their country, what hope is there that they will look critically at the death and destruction wrought on equally “uncivilised” and “savage” peoples 15,000 kilometres away? Especially, as the quote makes clear, when everyone from commanders on the ground to commentators back in Washington - not to mention drone operators a few kilometres away in Virginia - confuse the early 21st century with the early 19th century? We can only imagine that the average American estimate of native American deaths during the conquest of the West wasn’t much better than the average estimate - about 10,000 - of Iraqi civilian deaths (about 2-3 per cent of the actual total). 

But it’s hard to blame the average American when their leaders purposefully mislead them about the number of dead, either by refusing to do “body counts” or by declaring, as did President Obama’s top counter-terrorism adviser, John O Brennan in August of last year, that “there hasn’t been a single collateral death” from drone strikes in the Af-Pak theatre last year - without the mainstream media offering any serious rebuttal.

Rewriting history

Ultimately, with rare exceptions - such as post-World War II Germany and Japan, which were thoroughly defeated and whose peoples largely accepted American occupation and the rebuilding of their countries along Western lines - imperial occupations inevitably end with the occupier forced to make an ignominious withdrawal, leaving little but death, anger and broken hearts to show for their presence.

Lessons are rarely learned, and rather than try to heal the incredible psychological trauma on the soldiers who fight these wars, Chuck Norris and Sylvester Stallone will ensure that history is rewritten to highlight the suffering of the brave soldiers who were betrayed by weak leaders who didn’t give them the tools to win.

Meanwhile, untold numbers of real soldiers suffer all sorts of physical and psychic trauma, bringing the violence back to the US in ways that ultimately will prove every bit as damaging as the 9/11 attacks. And back in Afghanistan/Pakistan/Yemen/Your Country Here, poor and brutalised peoples will once again scrape by their meagre lives, with not even the glimmer of hope that those who are most responsible for their unending suffering - from Western leaders and corporate managers to local politicians, warlords and religious zealots - will pay for all the harm they’ve caused. And in Damascus, Bashar and his military commanders will surely offer a toast of gratitude to the unhinged American soldier who reminded the world that man’s inhumanity knows no ethnic, religious or national boundaries - before resuming their own, far more deliberate slaughter.

Mark Levine is a distinguished visiting professor at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Lund University in Sweden and the author of the forthcoming book about the revolutions in the Arab world, The Five Year Old Who Toppled a Pharaoh.

Al-Jazeera

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