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Re: Universal medicine
Posted by: HerbertKane178 ()
Date: September 03, 2012 11:05AM

Quote
MacReady
The following piece was posted on a blog discussing another manipulative cult group. It perfectly describes the process of self-indoctrination that occurs when someone takes on the belief system of a cult. It's especially applicable to the followers of Universal Medicine, who don't think they're in a cult because 'nobody forces them to do anything'. Rather, they're presented with a dilemma (in this case, they are asked by Serge to admit that their lives are not working), then presented with a series of choices (good and evil, pranic and fiery), which they are then left to decide between if they are to advance in the new belief system (the initiation ladder devised by Serge). I have provided the link to the original blog in order to credit the source:

[jamesparkinsoncult.blogspot.com.au]

Addicted to inspiration?

The nature of cult mind control
'Mind Control' (aka 'Brainwashing' or 'Thought Reform') is a shorthand term for a complex process of mental and psychological manipulation, which occurs within a cult. It is a means of exercising undue influence over a person.
The most effective mind-control is the kind that isn't recognised by the victim as any kind of manipulation. You don't feel it, you think you are in control.
Briefly, this is how it works. A cult promotes its cultish belief system, and then believers control their own minds, as they train their minds and reform their personalities, in accordance with the tenets of their cultish new belief system.
Understanding the disorientating, drug-like nature of a cult belief system and worldview is the key to understanding cult mind control.
Cults promote a belief system which is utopian and idealistic, and also dualistic and bi-polar in nature. Dualistic, in the sense that they tend to see the world in terms of two opposite poles, such as pure good and evil, the saved and the fallen, the enlightened and the ignorant, etc.
Cult belief systems are also bi-polar in psychological terms, rather like Bi-polar disorder or manic-depression. Cults promote a vision of an ideal 'new life' or 'new self' ('the true individual' in FWBO terms), which members believe they can attain by following the cult teachings. E.g.:
'The central teaching of the Buddha is that we can change our lives. Buddhism offers clear and practical guidelines as to how men and women can realise their full potential for understanding and kindness. Meditation is a direct way of working on ourselves, to bring about positive change in our lives. We teach two simple and complementary meditations. One helps us develop a calm, clear, focused mind; the other transforms our emotional life, enabling us to enjoy greater self-confidence and positivity towards others.'
Cult belief systems are bi-polar because they encourage the aspirant to identify with this imagined ideal new self, and then, from the perspective of this new self, to see their old self as comparatively inferior and flawed. E.g:
'Bodhi [Enlightenment] is a state of insight, of wisdom, of awareness - to begin with, insight into one's own self. It consists in taking a very deep, clear, profound look into oneself, and seeing how, on all the different levels of one's being, one is conditioned, governed by the reactive mind, reacting mechanically, automatically, on account of past psychological conditionings of which only too often one is largely unconscious. It is seeing, moreover, the extent to which one is dominated, even against one's will, - often without ones knowledge, by the negative emotions.'
An inner tension or conflict is set up, between the 'positive' new self (the 'Stepford' personality), and the 'negative' old self. In effect, a split personality is created, with pride and hubris for the idealised new self, and shame and guilt for the unreformed old self.
All cults seem to be motivated by this bipolar mixture of hubris and guilt. Exactly what is considered 'positive' or 'negative', virtuous or sinful, may vary considerably, depending on the tenets of the particular belief system in question, but cult belief systems generally seem to have this same underlying hubris/guilt dynamic.
Cult members are entranced by the cult's beguiling 'fantasy of heroic virtue', which both inspires and traps them. As they try to practice the cult teachings for themselves, they tend to alternate between seeing themselves as fairly heroic in their efforts to achieve an ideal personality and to help bring about a ideal new world, or feeling guilty over their failure to overcome their recalcitrant old self, with all its supposed negativity and reactivity and sinfulness.
The hubris can either be a personal hubris, in the case of the cult's top hierarchy, or more usually, for rank and file members, it is a kind of projected hubris, or hubris-by-proxy - the hope and expectation that in due course, after diligent practice, they will attain the ideal for themselves, or at least make definite progress towards the ideal. This expectation can sometimes lead to a sort of collective hubris among established cult members. They see themselves as part of an elite, and tend to look down rather sniffily upon the mores and values of mainstream society.
To varying degrees, believers can experience a sort of refined mania of inspiration, almost like a drug high, when they are in the hubris phase, identifying with their imaginary idealised new self, with its enhanced understanding and kindness, etc. This inspiration is pleasant and even intoxicating in itself, and it may also be interpreted as a sign of spiritual progress, as a glimpse of a higher reality, or as evidence of the truth of the belief system. This is all part of the circular, solipsistic, self-validating nature of a cult belief system.
Besides tending to believe in the objective truth of the belief system, believers can also become psychologically addicted to the inspired state.This combination of faith and addiction can make a person very loyal to their group, and to the teachers and leaders who inspire and guide the group. In effect, they become dependent on the group and its leadership to guide their 'spiritual growth'. Of course, cult leaders can exploit this dependency in various ways.
If members fall out of favour, even temporarily, with the group's leadership, or if they begin to doubt if they can achieve the group's ideals, they may experience a sort of religious depression, in the form of anxiety or guilt over their seeming inability to free themselves from their negative 'old self', with all its bad habits and reactivity and lack of faith. This guilt or depression tends to reinforce their desire to return to the inspired state, and to reinforce their addiction to the inspiring vision of the cult belief system, so there can be a cumulative feedback process operating too - the more they cling to their inspiration, the more they are prone to depression once the inspiration wears off. And the more they experience depression, the more they crave inspiration. And so on.
At an extreme, believers fear they will become ill or fall into hell if they leave the group.
All this goes on within a cult members mind. A cult does not really control its members by using external coercion. It is the belief system/worldview itself which is the primary active agent in cult mind control. The actual controlling of mind is done by the person themselves, as they attempt to discipline their mind and reform their personality, in accordance with the tenets of their new belief system. Effectively, a cult, via its belief system, uses a person's own energy and aspirations against them.
It would be a mistake to assume that only weak-willed people join cults. On the contrary, it is often the more ambitious and strong-willed people who become the most committed cult members.
Of course, ordinary society can be a bit bi-polar as well, with its pressure to be 'successful', with an ideal physique, lifestyle, etc. The pressure is just more focused and sustained within a cult. A cult can play on both a person's anxieties and their aspirations at the same time. They (or rather their belief system) can potentially make a person feel both more guilty about their 'old self' with its normal human weaknesses, and simultaneously inspire them with an imaginary idealised vision of a wonderful new self and a new life. Very bi-polar.
In general, when you talk to a cult member, it can be helpful to understand which self, either the old self with its old set of beliefs, or the new self with its new set of cult beliefs, is more dominant at any particular time.
If you criticise a cult member, this may just encourage their tendency to see themselves (their old self) as flawed, and may push them further into the cult. If you criticise their church or group, the cult-member will go into cult-self mode and will see your criticisms as tending to confirm the cult's warnings about the outside world and its negative effects. A better approach may be to acknowledge and encourage a cult member's old self, without criticising or threatening the new cult self. If a cult member feels valued in themselves, and their old self does not feel devalued, then this weakens the cult's attraction for them.



Why do people join cults?
Obviously, no-one is forced to join a cult. No-one is forced to adopt a new belief system. Equally, however, no-one can really make an informed assessment of a group or its belief system in advance, without having first had some personal experience of it. You can't knock it if you haven't tried it.
The ideals and goals of a cult's belief system are such as to give the cult an inherent psychological advantage over its critics and doubters, because on the one hand the cult's ideals are attractive and inspiring, while on the other hand they are non-falsifiable - they can never be shown to be false or deluded, and indeed it can seem negative and reactionary even to question them.
In general, it can be difficult to know in advance whether it would be beneficial or not to follow the study and training opportunities offered by a particular group or organisation. The benefits, if any, of group involvement can only really be evaluated after a suitable period of time spent with the group. How long a suitable period of time might be, depends on the individual, and cannot be determined in advance. In other words, it can be very difficult to know from the outside whether a group is a cult or not, unless you are forewarned and have enough knowledge about cults to be able to spot the telltale signs.
The danger for someone who may unwittingly become involved with a cult is that they will be exposed to the cult belief system, which is psychoactive, like a drug. It can be addictive and disorientating, and dangerous even to experiment with. Once involved, it may not be all that easy for someone to escape from a cult belief system.
Cults will do their best to ensure initial apparent benefits for new members. A cult is rather like a card sharp, who will let a newcomer win the first few games, in order to take all their money in the long run. There is no problem, so long as a member is happy to continue their involvement with the group. However, should a member at some stage become unhappy with their involvement, or develop serious doubts about the belief system or the integrity of the group's leadership, then the process of disentanglement may not be all that straightforward.



Leaving a cult.
Rejecting the belief system in its entirety may not be easy, or even desirable. Even after physical contact with the group has ceased, elements of the cult belief system are likely to linger in the mind of an ex-member for some time, depending how deeply and for how long they were involved. They may experience feelings of anxiety and disorientation as they try to rid themselves of the unwanted remnants of the cult belief system and worldview, while simultaneously trying to regain some confidence either in their old, pre-cult belief system and ways of relating to the world, or alternatively, in some new, post-cult belief system.
In trying to rid their minds of the unwanted remnants of the cult belief system, an ex-member is effectively trying to use their own thought processes to disentangle their own thought processes. This is quite a difficult task, rather like trying to lift yourself up by your own shoelaces.
For a while, an ex-member may exist in a sort of limbo between the cult world and the outside world, unsure which to believe in. To the extent that the cult belief system retains any degree of respect or credibility within an ex-member's mind, then to that extent leaving the group will seem like abandoning the ideals and aspirations of the group's belief system, and therefore like a failure.
On the other hand, to the extent that the cult belief system fails to retain credibility and is eschewed, to that extent an ex-member will tend to feel shame at their foolishness and gullibility in having once adopted beliefs and aspired to ideals which they now regard as unrealistic.
So either they are a failure, or a gullible fool. Either way their self-confidence takes a knock, and they may find it difficult to have any faith in their own judgement, or in their ability to make sensible decisions. For a while, they may not know what to believe, or who to trust.
While an ex-member is in this process of disentangling themselves from the cult belief system and ways of thinking, it can be helpful to talk to other ex-members from various different cults, who have gone through a similar process of disentanglement. Additionally, there are professional 'exit-counselors', often former cult members themselves, who may be able to help unravel any psychological disorientation or damage resulting from cult involvement.
However, some caution is also necessary, because some so-called cult awareness networks are, ironically, actually run by cults, and some supposedly independent academic researchers are in effect cult apologists, whose research is sometimes indirectly funded by cults seeking a positive report for their own marketing and public relations purposes.



How do cults get away with it?
Mind control is an intangible thing. It is a complex psychological process which leaves no physical trace or evidence behind. Therefore it is virtually impossible to prove that mind control has occurred in any particular case, or even that it exists at all.
Mind control occurs as a result of an individual becoming involved with a cult and its belief system. Unfortunately, the workings of cult mind control are not widely understood by the general public. Consequently, cults are almost never held responsible for the beliefs they promote, or for the changes in an individual's behaviour that those beliefs may cause. The individual is held responsible for acting on those beliefs, but the cult is rarely if ever held responsible for promoting those beliefs in the first place.
No criticisms of the allegedly harmful effect that a cult's belief system may have had upon a member's mind or behaviour can ever be proved objectively, because the whole subject of personal belief is by nature largely subjective and intangible, and therefore unprovable either way.
Victims are left with the near-impossible task of proving the unprovable. A cult can simply say that its critics are motivated by personal resentment and negativity, or that they had hidden psychological problems before they became involved with the group. So long as the burden of proof remains with the critic, a cult can never lose. A cult can be a complete scam, and damaging to those who become involved, but nobody can actually prove it.
Therefore it is very difficult to expose a cult, or to prevent it from continuing to expand and to attract new recruits


That's a really good blog, thanks for posting. Very illustrative...

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Re: Universal medicine
Date: September 03, 2012 12:26PM

Quote
MacReady
The author of the following piece is strongly advised to thoroughly investigate Serge's past business dealings before recommending his teachings as the answer to the world's economic ills. She will find several people eager to catch up with Benhayon, and more than willing to testify to the true nature of his 'integrity' in financial matters:

[wordsonsergebenhayon.wordpress.com]

Having attended Universal Medicine’s courses for the past 6 years now, I have found in Serge Benhayon someone who is able to talk intelligently, shedding invaluable light on this ‘illness’ we have in society, at work and our physical bodies. All I know and can feel is someone who communicates and lives with the utmost integrity and professionalism, which for me is the key in ensuring the credibility of voice that is not evident in your article.

Through listening to Serge speak via audios and courses, it is clear that he seeks only to serve in raising the awareness and reality (truth) of what is really going on in regards to the above worldly dilemmas which impact us on a daily basis. By simply presenting that the micro (ie., personal or human level) must first be examined before then being able to respond on the macro/world scale is obvious economics, and it makes responsible sense to me to consider myself first before another.

I don't know whether to laugh or cry when I read this stuff.
Here are the two main issues.
One- false problems. Everything Serge says and does is based on false/interpreted 'problems' so the word 'truth' is a nonsense.
Two- None of these people know Serge, only what he tells them. It is like a picture of Dorian Gray where you see a close up of one part of the picture and are not seeing it all...or if that metaphor is a little obvious, how about a story board with lots of events, where they are seeing a few they are involved in, which are carefully presented, and not the rest of them- which I can assure you is many, plentiful and contradicts the view they have.

What I do know MacReady and others is that for the 'students' ( they are not members of cult) truth is very relative. None of the stuff that has emerged phases them at all. In fact, it confirms their beliefs that the 'truth' is under attack- and that through their 'unusual' identification with Serge, so are they. They are occupying a parallel world of relative truths, but where they see things as black and white; Pranic/Soulful. Esoteric/Temporal.

Serge shifting his position, changing his sites, retracting statements, not complying with laws, meeting his now wife at the tender age of 13...and more... means.....well nothing. Because the 'truth' is more important than facts.

One wonders how many facts hitting them in the face they can take before they wake up. Lets see. time will surely tell.

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Re: Universal medicine
Posted by: John lazuras ()
Date: September 03, 2012 01:41PM

Hi Concerned Partner,

With all the NEWS reports (paper and TV) and articles such as Good Weekend, Medical Observer, Australian Doctor and the various forums the same old story is coming out about this organisation.

This organisation is a CULT and is very dangerous in its practices and beliefs.

How can all these news reporters get it wrong on this organisation, I have heard all the UM PR stuff like people are out to get Serge because he is successful, our partners left us and we are bitter.

The followers do not want to know the truth only if the words are spoken from “The One” Serge. We all know that he is only going to tell the followers what he wants them to hear and believe.

Like you CP I do not know to laugh or cry at the followers and believers of this group….the doctors, surgeons and professional people and husbands and wifes……they are so lost in the world of Universal Medicine that they cannot see the TRUTH out there.

Followers the ALARM bells are ringing out there on Serge and his group go ask common people what they think of UM and be prepared as you will not like what you will be told.

I laugh at the stupidity of all for not being able to see UM for what it is and I am also very saddened that these smart and intelligent people have got caught up in this group and are wasting their lives away for no GOOD at all………………..only misery and shame will follow.

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Re: Universal medicine
Posted by: MacReady ()
Date: September 03, 2012 04:53PM

Finally, a UM 'student' blog entry which at least implicitly acknowledges the cultish nature of Serge's bizarre supernatural claims and teachings. Interesting to note that it does so by drawing comparison (which according to Serge is a no-no) to other religions and cult traditions (which according to Serge, are all folly and the result of the Lords of Form) and figureheads such as the Dalai Lama (whom Serge claims he would be willing to debate on these matters, so that he could show the DL the errors of Buddhist beliefs):

[truthaboutsergebenhayon.com]

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Re: Universal medicine
Posted by: HowDoesItHappen ()
Date: September 03, 2012 05:09PM

I reckon this:

"A better approach may be to acknowledge and encourage a cult member's old self, without criticising or threatening the new cult self. If a cult member feels valued in themselves, and their old self does not feel devalued, then this weakens the cult's attraction for them."

That should be posted to ANYONE who believes a loved one is being manipulated into a new belief system. It's a piece of the puzzle I've been searching for! I probably should have worked it out myself, but with all the understanding I've gained and all the advice I've heard I reckon that's the bit I needed sooner.

A good place to start at least.

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Re: Universal medicine
Posted by: MacReady ()
Date: September 03, 2012 05:11PM

One of the comments (in this instance posted by 'The Soulful Doctor') accompanying the following blog entry is rather telling:

[wordsonsergebenhayon.wordpress.com]


Eunice Minford on September 2, 2012 at 7:48 pm

"Thank you Eduardo. I loved reading your blog and the changes you have made and how you have come to trust your body more and more. Also it is clear that you developed the awareness for yourself of what is true and not true by using this marker of your body and what you feel energetically – how empowering is that? This shows how far away the media are from understanding Unimed when they talk about ‘brainwashing’ given that we use our own body as a marker and not the brain!"

I refer again to this essay in response to the 'we're not brainwashed' line of non-logic in this UM blog entry:
[jamesparkinsoncult.blogspot.com.au]

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Re: Universal medicine
Posted by: HerbertKane178 ()
Date: September 04, 2012 02:27PM

The art world has taken an interest in Serge. This article from Artinfo:

http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/822508/did-aussie-self-styled-healer-claim-to-be-da-vinci-reincarnated-1

This comment by Serge stood out:

“Due to the liberty of the unscrupulous use of positions in the media, and its one sided abuse of me, I am not in a position to offer any comment”.

It would appear that everyone is 'abusive' who does not agree with him, or wishes to question his claims.

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Re: Universal medicine
Posted by: MacReady ()
Date: September 04, 2012 03:05PM

"I know more than any scientist in my inner heart ... I know everything about the universe and how it works. I can answer any question about any mystery in the world, any mystery in the universe." -SB.

Odd that he can't provide a single comprehensible answer to questions about his rubbish supernatural claims though, isn't it?

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Re: Universal medicine
Posted by: MacReady ()
Date: September 05, 2012 07:49AM

All readers, whether the friend/relative of a UM adherent, an investigative journalist or the merely curious should be made aware that Serge's books and presentations propagate H. P. Blavatsky's Aryan root-race theories. These were later expanded upon by occultists in Germany, leading to the racial madness that informed the Third Reich.

The following is a basic overview:

[en.wikipedia.org]


"The Theosophical movement founded by Helena Blavatsky and Henry Olcott at the end of the nineteenth century took inspiration from Indian culture, in this case, perhaps, from the Hindu reform movement the Arya Samaj founded by Swami Dayananda. Blavatsky argued that humanity had descended from a series of "Root Races", naming the fifth root race (out of seven) the Aryan Race. She thought that the Aryans originally came from Atlantis and described the Aryan races with the following words:

"The Aryan races, for instance, now varying from dark brown, almost black, red-brown-yellow, down to the whitest creamy colour, are yet all of one and the same stock -- the Fifth Root-Race -- and spring from one single progenitor, (...) who is said to have lived over 18,000,000 years ago, and also 850,000 years ago -- at the time of the sinking of the last remnants of the great continent of Atlantis."[30]

Blavatsky used "Root Race" as a technical term to describe human evolution over the large time periods in her cosmology. However, she also claimed that there were modern non-Aryan peoples who were inferior to Aryans. She regularly contrasts "Aryan" with "Semitic" culture, to the detriment of the latter, asserting that Semitic peoples are an offshoot of Aryans who have become "degenerate in spirituality and perfected in materiality."[31] She also states that some peoples are "semi-animal creatures". These latter include "the Tasmanians, a portion of the Australians and a mountain tribe in China." There are also "considerable numbers of the mixed Lemuro-Atlantean peoples produced by various crossings with such semi-human stocks -- e.g., the wild men of Borneo, the Veddhas of Ceylon, most of the remaining Australians, Bushmen, Negritos, Andaman Islanders, etc."[32]

Despite this, Blavatsky's admirers claim that her thinking was not connected to fascist or racialist ideas, asserting that she believed in a Universal Brotherhood of humanity and wrote that "all men have spiritually and physically the same origin" and that "mankind is essentially of one and the same essence".[33] On the other hand, in The Secret Doctrine, Blavatsky states: "Verily mankind is 'of one blood,' but not of the same essence."

Blavatsky connects physical race with spiritual attributes constantly throughout her works:

"Esoteric history teaches that idols and their worship died out with the Fourth Race, until the survivors of the hybrid races of the latter (Chinamen, African Negroes, &c.) gradually brought the worship back. The Vedas countenance no idols; all the modern Hindu writings do".[34]

"The intellectual difference between the Aryan and other civilized nations and such savages as the South Sea Islanders, is inexplicable on any other grounds. No amount of culture, nor generations of training amid civilization, could raise such human specimens as the Bushmen, the Veddhas of Ceylon, and some African tribes, to the same intellectual level as the Aryans, the Semites, and the Turanians so called. The 'sacred spark' is missing in them and it is they who are the only inferior races on the globe, now happily -- owing to the wise adjustment of nature which ever works in that direction -- fast dying out. Verily mankind is 'of one blood,' but not of the same essence. We are the hot-house, artificially quickened plants in nature, having in us a spark, which in them is latent".[35]

According to Blavatsky, "the MONADS of the lowest specimens of humanity (the "narrow-brained" savage South-Sea Islander, the African, the Australian) had no Karma to work out when first born as men, as their more favoured brethren in intelligence had".[36]

She also prophecies of the destruction of the racial "failures of nature" as the future "higher race" ascends:

"Thus will mankind, race after race, perform its appointed cycle-pilgrimage. Climates will, and have already begun, to change, each tropical year after the other dropping one sub-race, but only to beget another higher race on the ascending cycle; while a series of other less favoured groups -- the failures of nature -- will, like some individual men, vanish from the human family without even leaving a trace behind".[37]

The second subrace of the Fifth or Aryan root race, the Arabian, is regarded by Theosophists as one of the Aryan subraces. It is believed by Theosophists that the Arabians, although asserted in traditional Theosophy to be of Aryan (i.e., Indo-European) ancestry, adopted the Semitic language of the people around them who had migrated earlier from Atlantis (the fifth or (original) Semite subrace of the Atlantean root race). Theosophists assert that the Jews originated as an offshoot of the Arabian subrace in what is now Yemen about 30,000 BC. They migrated first to Somalia and then later to Egypt where they lived until the time of Moses. Thus, according to the teachings of Theosophy, the Jews are part of the Aryan race.[38]

Samael Aun Weor published a book in 1967 retitled in 2008 The Doomed Aryan Race in which he asserted that the Aryan "Root Race" is doomed to be destroyed by hydrogen bombs unless the people of the Aryan race learn tantric yoga.[39]"

And the influence of these theories on Nazism:

[en.wikipedia.org]

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Re: Universal medicine
Posted by: treefern ()
Date: September 05, 2012 11:41AM

Some housekeeping and not in any particular order:

Thank you corboy, I didn't realize others were also being PMed, useful information (as per usual) for you to pass on. I had yet again a feeling of disquiet when I was recieving the PMs and then it struck me....NO EMOTION> Ah some quite disturbing stories and always ending with a question of me, but here is the giveaway UMers. When human beings go through marriage breakups, drying of cancer or partners running off with UM work mates, they the SUPPOSED "non UMers" (quote) FEEL, angry, hurt or scared! To all the UMers out there sending Personal Messages to hook us into your game STOP now you are being plain silly.

HerbertKane I have often thought that if I had been reincarnated as a great master painter, I sure as hell would now be "feeling into" myself and at least be picking up a brush, some paints and hanging MY latest works on the walls of my workplace!

MacReady, the link to the jamesparkinsoncult site was brilliant information for me to read. I only wish the UMers had open minds and open hearts enough to even read some of the wonderful information that is being put out there via this site; before the empire comes crashing down and they find themselves clinging to 'strangeness'.

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