cannabisnews.com: US: Congress Plans Pot-Info Ban





US: Congress Plans Pot-Info Ban
Posted by FoM on January 18, 2000 at 10:03:01 PT
Richard Lake, MAPNews Sr, Editor 
Source: MapInc.
One month after US Drug Czar General McCaffrey told a Congressional committee that he was getting "rolled in the public arena" by Cannabis Culture and other pot-supporters, a bill has been introduced into the US Congress which would ban all pro-pot books and websites. Anything which explains how to grow or use cannabis, or any other prohibited plant or substance, would be completely censored. The bill is called the Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act, but its real target is magazines, books and websites which dissent from the war on drugs mentality. 
The bill is backed by a coalition of a dozen senators, led by California Democrat Dianne Feinstein, a longtime supporter of internet regulation, and Utah Republican Orrin Hatch, the arch-conservative Mormon Minister who chairs the Senate Judiciary committee. Although this bill has a ways to go before becoming law, and although it's unconstitutional, if it is passed the repercussions to pot culture will be immediate and severe. How many magazine distributors and printers would be willing to challenge the US government on behalf of their pro-cannabis clients? Likely very few, which could leave magazines like this one fighting for survival without any means of producing or distributing their product. The part of the bill most worrisome to pro-pot magazines and websites is as follows: "It shall be unlawful for any person to teach or demonstrate the manufacture of a controlled substance, or to distribute by any means information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the manufacture or use of a controlled substance, with the intent that the teaching, demonstration, or information be used for, or in furtherance of, an activity that constitutes a Federal crime." This would ban all books and magazines with grow tips, doctors' advice to medical-pot patients, harm-reduction pamphlets explaining safe use of banned drugs, brochures explaining needle sterilization and needle exchange, and even website links to other sites which do any of these things. Since hemp cultivation remains a federal felony, books on how to grow and process industrial hemp would also be banned. The penalty for violating this info-ban is up to 10 years imprisonment, and a hefty fine. The federal Crime Control Act of 1990 makes it a crime to "sell or offer for sale drug paraphernalia," a law that the Supreme Court upheld as constitutional in 1994. This new bill expands and modifies this law, as well as other federal anti-drug legislation. On July 22, the bill was read twice and referred to the Committee on Judiciary. Further hearings were held on July 28, with no indication of when consideration on the bill will continue. More Cops, More Jails:The Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation Act has a number of other nasty surprises in it as well, including the creation of many more DEA agents, with new offices to be stationed in "small and mid-sized communities." The added manpower will be used to assist local law enforcement in "interrogating suspects, conducting surveillance operations, and collecting evidence" against drug users. Another worrisome provision of this bill would modify the Controlled Substances Act to make "risk of harm to the environment" while manufacturing a banned substance as being equivalent to "risk of harm to human life", and upping the penalty for this to a mandatory minimum of 10 years! This is in addition to any other penalties for the actual cultivation/production. Although Hatch claimed this is to snare the treacherous methamphetamine maker who pollutes the environment with his lab, this vaguely defined section would certainly include any pot farmers caught growing in forest or park lands. Further, in the specific cases of amphetamine or methamphetamine, the onus would be on the manufacturer to prove that he was not causing risk of harm to human life or the environment, or else face the mandatory 10 years imprisonment. Oppression Tag-Team:The Dianne Feinstein/Orrin Hatch team-up is not new. Although from different parties, they share a passion for scare-tactics and government control. In 1996 they joined forces to make it a felony to possess computer-generated images of naked children. Feinstein has also tried to pass bills to ban secure internet encryption products and bomb-making information. Hatch, meanwhile, has had great success passing bills labeled as being anti-methamphetamine. He co-sponsored the Comprehensive Methamphetamine Act of 1999, which expanded drug courts and dramatically increased the mandatory minimums for methamphetamine offences. The 1999 Rural Methamphetamine Use Response Act also expanded police powers and budgets to fight the methamphetamine "epidemic." Although both are harmful pieces of pro-drug-war legislation, neither is as horrifying as the current bill. Here's some of Senator Orrin Hatch's speech made while introducing this repressive legislation: "I was shocked to discover that those who embrace the drug counter-culture these days are using the internet to promote, advertise, and sell illegal drugs and drug paraphernalia. "In 1992, Congress passed a law that made it illegal for anyone to sell or offer for sale drug paraphernalia. This law resulted in the closings of numerous 'head shops,' yet, now the out-of-business store owners are selling their illegal drug paraphernalia on the internet… "This bill will not only prevent web sites from advertising drug paraphernalia for sale, but it will also prohibit web sites that do not sell drug paraphernalia from allowing other sites that do from advertising on its web site… "There are even web sites that advertise for sale marijuana and poppy seeds, along with growing and nurturing instructions. This type of behavior is not only reprehensible, but it is also illegal, and this clarifying provision can help stop this behavior from continuing over the internet." Censorship Happens:This bill should be of great concern to pot-people across America. Although some might think that such an oppressive censorship law could never pass, take note that it already exists in many other supposedly democratic nations. All "literature for illicit drug use" was banned in Canada in 1988, and grow books and High Times magazines were unavailable for almost a decade. Their import or sale is still punishable under Canada's Criminal Code with a $100,000 fine and six months in jail, although the law is now only rarely enforced, simply because we have brazenly forced our government to accept our existence. England and France also have severe anti-cannabis information laws, and a few years back British author Mick Marlow spent six months in jail and had all copies of his grow-book Tricameral Sinsemilla burned. France has also fined and jailed pro-pot website owners and magazine publishers. A similar censorship law has come up on the state level. In early 2000 the Illinois state legislature will debate Bill 792, which would ban providing "information about cannabis by the Internet" if the information could be used for an illegal activity. The bill unanimously passed the state House last year, but got stuck in the Senate due to negative publicity. It is due to come up again during the coming months. Given that Senator Hatch has already passed two anti-methamphetamine bills this year, there is no reason to believe that he cannot pass this one as well. The passage of bills through the US Congress can seem slow, but observers predict that unless opposed, the bill could become law before the presidential election in November 2000. NOTE: The following information has been updated by Dana Larsen and includes information not found in the original article:For More Information:- - If you want to stop this bill, then please send a letter or email to your local and national media, alerting them to this bill and its negative repercussions. Also contact your local representative and urge them to oppose this bill. - For detailed legislative information about this bill, go to: http://thomas.loc.gov/ and do a search for S.486 and HR.2987. (note - if any of the URLs are not clickable links in your browser you may copy the lines into your location field) - For the Senate summary and status info: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d106:SN00486: - For the Senate testimony from when the bill was passed, click on item 6 at this page: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/R?r106:FLD001:S14932 - The complete text of the House bill can be found at: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c106:H.R.2987: - For the most recent House of Representatives summary and status info: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d106:HR02987: - - To read the current US anti-paraphernalia law which this bill expands: http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/21/863.html - - For the House of Representatives subcommittee on Crime: http://www.house.gov/judiciary/sub106.htm - - For the House of Representatives subcommittee on Health and the Environment: http://www.house.gov/commerce/health.html Sponsors and Subcommittee Members:The House version of the bill is sponsored by Rep Chris Cannon, and co-sponsored by Representatives Howard Berman, Ken Calvert, Charles Canady, Michael Forbes, Elton Gallegly, Jim Gibbons, Asa Hutchinson, Zoe Lofgren, Bill McCollum, Jerry Moran, George Nethercutt, Charles Pickering, James Rogan, Pete Sessions, Matt Salmon and James Talent. The members of the House Subcommittee on Crime are: REPUBLICANS Bill McCollum, FL, Chairman Steve Chabot, OH Bob Barr, GA George W. Gekas, PA Howard Coble, NC Lamar S. Smith, TX Charles T. Canady, FL Asa Hutchinson, AR DEMOCRATS Robert C. Scott, VA Martin T. Meehan, MA Steven R. Rothman, NJ Anthony D. Weiner, NY Sheila Jackson-Lee, TX The members of the House Subcommittee on Health and the Environment are: REPUBLICANS Michael Bilirakis, FL, Chairman Fred Upton, MI Cliff Stearns, FL James C. Greenwood, PA Nathan Deal, GA Richard Burr, NC Brian P. Bilbray, CA Ed Whitfield, KY Greg Ganske, IA Charlie Norwood, GA Tom A. Coburn, OK, Vice Chairman Rick Lazio, NY Barbara Cubin, WY John B. Shadegg, AZ Charles W. 'Chip' Pickering, MS Ed Bryant, TN DEMOCRATS Sherrod Brown, OH Henry A. Waxman, CA Frank Pallone, Jr., NJ Peter Deutsch, FL Bart Stupak, MI Gene Green, TX Ted Strickland, OH Diana DeGette, CO Thomas M. Barrett, WI Lois Capps, CA Ralph M. Hall, TX Edolphus Towns, NY Anna G. Eshoo, CA URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n071/a01.html Newshawk: Richard Lake, MAPNews Sr, Editor Pubdate: Nov-Dec, 1999 Source: Cannabis Culture Copyright: 1999 Cannabis Culture, redistributed by MAP by permission Contact: muggles cannabisculture.com Fax: (604) 669-9038 Address: 324 West Hastings, Vancouver, BC, Canada, V6B 1K6 Website: http://www.cannabisculture.com/ Author: Dana Larsen, Editor Note: Readers who think this bill, if it becomes law, will only impact magazines like High Times and Cannabis Culture should take a closer look. Needle exchange and harm reduction information will be seen as "information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the manufacture or use of a controlled substance." And medical marijuana books by Dr. Grinspoon, Dr. Mikuriya, Steve Kubby and others will have to be removed from book store shelves and burned. Thousands of websites, including ours, could be in violation of the law. House committees are now working on the bill. Please see the information on what you can do at the end of this item. - Richard Lake 
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Comment #12 posted by Medical-MJ-User on March 19, 2000 at 11:16:22 PT
American: a prison without bars
I happen to know quite a few people who are using pot for the same illnesses Orgeon will soon be including in their medical marijuana laws: Depression, Attention Deficit Disorder, Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome and insomnia. Until I learned about medical marijuan on the Net and started smoking MJ six months ago, I didn't think ANYTHING would help me and that one day I'd lose my struggle to survive, one lasting many decades (a big expense to insurance companies and for me personally). Depression is the 8th leading cause of death.Over the last few decades I've tried many, many medications and none worked - NONE. A couple of puffs of marijuana helps immensely. I'm now getting excellent relief from extreme suicidal ideation. I thank people on the NET for helping me to become aware of medical marijuana. It's been established that thee medical illnesses listed above BIOCHEMICAL in nature and must to be treated biochemically. There are fewer hard drug users in Holland because MJ actually alleviates the NEED for hard drugs. If aspirin works, you don't need to take Tylenol with codein. If marijuana works, there's no need to take hard drugs. That's the bottom line.  If anyone in the White House is reading this message, please inform your colleagues that medical marijuana is more akin to the aspirin analogy above and should be decriminalized in ALL states so that doctors can finally help people with illnesses that are NOT helped by pharmaceutical medications.Stop unconstitutional laws from being passed -- otherwise the war on drugs could eventually turn into war against an inhumane U.S. government. Above all, free the sick people who've been imprisoned for smoking medical marijuana.      
[ Post Comment ]

Comment #11 posted by Medical-MJ-User on March 19, 2000 at 11:12:05 PT
American: a prison without bars
I happen to know quite a few people who are using pot for the same illnesses Orgeon will soon be including in their medical marijuana laws: Depression, Attention Deficit Disorder, Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome and insomnia. Until I learned about medical marijuan on the Net and started smoking MJ six months ago, I didn't think ANYTHING would help me and that one day I'd lose my struggle to survive, one lasting many decades (a big expense to insurance companies and for me personally). Depression is the 8th leading cause of death.Over the last few decades I've tried many, many medications and none worked - NONE. A couple of puffs of marijuana helps immensely. I'm now getting excellent relief from extreme suicidal ideation. I thank people on the NET for helping me to become aware of medical marijuana. It's been established that thee medical illnesses listed above BIOCHEMICAL in nature and must to be treated biochemically. There are fewer hard drug users in Holland because MJ actually alleviates the NEED for hard drugs. If aspirin works, you don't need to take Tylenol with codein. If marijuana works, there's no need to take hard drugs. That's the bottom line.  If anyone in the White House is reading this message, please inform your colleagues that medical marijuana is more akin to the aspirin analogy above and should be decriminalized in ALL states so that doctors can finally help people with illnesses that are NOT helped by pharmaceutical medications.Stop unconstitutional laws from being passed -- otherwise the war on drugs could eventually turn into war against an inhumane U.S. government. Above all, free the sick people who've been imprisoned for smoking medical marijuana.      
[ Post Comment ]

Comment #10 posted by Medical-MJ-User on March 19, 2000 at 11:10:36 PT
American: a prison without bars
I happen to know quite a few people who are using pot for the same illnesses Orgeon will soon be including in their medical marijuana laws: Depression, Attention Deficit Disorder, Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome and insomnia. Until I learned about medical marijuan on the Net and started smoking MJ six months ago, I didn't think ANYTHING would help me and that one day I'd lose my struggle to survive, one lasting many decades (a big expense to insurance companies and for me personally). Depression is the 8th leading cause of death.Over the last few decades I've tried many, many medications and none worked - NONE. A couple of puffs of marijuana helps immensely. I'm now getting excellent relief from extreme suicidal ideation. I thank people on the NET for helping me to become aware of medical marijuana. It's been established that thee medical illnesses listed above BIOCHEMICAL in nature and must to be treated biochemically. There are fewer hard drug users in Holland because MJ actually alleviates the NEED for hard drugs. If aspirin works, you don't need to take Tylenol with codein. If marijuana works, there's no need to take hard drugs. That's the bottom line.  If anyone in the White House is reading this message, please inform your colleagues that medical marijuana is more akin to the aspirin analogy above and should be decriminalized in ALL states so that doctors can finally help people with illnesses that are NOT helped by pharmaceutical medications.Stop unconstitutional laws from being passed -- otherwise the war on drugs could eventually turn into war against an inhumane U.S. government. Above all, free the sick people who've been imprisoned for smoking medical marijuana.      
[ Post Comment ]

Comment #9 posted by Medical-MJ-User on March 19, 2000 at 11:08:17 PT
American: a prison without bars
I happen to know quite a few people who are using pot for the same illnesses Orgeon will soon be including in their medical marijuana laws: Depression, Attention Deficit Disorder, Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome and insomnia. Until I learned about medical marijuan on the Net and started smoking MJ six months ago, I didn't think ANYTHING would help me and that one day I'd lose my struggle to survive, one lasting many decades (a big expense to insurance companies and for me personally). Depression is the 8th leading cause of death.Over the last few decades I've tried many, many medications and none worked - NONE. A couple of puffs of marijuana helps immensely. I'm now getting excellent relief from extreme suicidal ideation. I thank people on the NET for helping me to become aware of medical marijuana. It's been established that thee medical illnesses listed above BIOCHEMICAL in nature and must to be treated biochemically. There are fewer hard drug users in Holland because MJ actually alleviates the NEED for hard drugs. If aspirin works, you don't need to take Tylenol with codein. If marijuana works, there's no need to take hard drugs. That's the bottom line.  If anyone in the White House is reading this message, please inform your colleagues that medical marijuana is more akin to the aspirin analogy above and should be decriminalized in ALL states so that doctors can finally help people with illnesses that are NOT helped by pharmaceutical medications.Stop unconstitutional laws from being passed -- otherwise the war on drugs could eventually turn into war against an inhumane U.S. government. Above all, free the sick people who've been imprisoned for smoking medical marijuana.      
[ Post Comment ]

Comment #8 posted by Medical-MJ-User on March 19, 2000 at 11:05:24 PT
American: a prison without bars
I happen to know quite a few people who are using pot for the same illnesses Orgeon will soon be including in their medical marijuana laws: Depression, Attention Deficit Disorder, Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome and insomnia. Until I learned about medical marijuan on the Net and started smoking MJ six months ago, I didn't think ANYTHING would help me and that one day I'd lose my struggle to survive, one lasting many decades (a big expense to insurance companies and for me personally). Depression is the 8th leading cause of death.Over the last few decades I've tried many, many medications and none worked - NONE. A couple of puffs of marijuana helps immensely. I'm now getting excellent relief from extreme suicidal ideation. I thank people on the NET for helping me to become aware of medical marijuana. It's been established that thee medical illnesses listed above BIOCHEMICAL in nature and must to be treated biochemically. There are fewer hard drug users in Holland because MJ actually alleviates the NEED for hard drugs. If aspirin works, you don't need to take Tylenol with codein. If marijuana works, there's no need to take hard drugs. That's the bottom line.  If anyone in the White House is reading this message, please inform your colleagues that medical marijuana is more akin to the aspirin analogy above and should be decriminalized in ALL states so that doctors can finally help people with illnesses that are NOT helped by pharmaceutical medications.Stop unconstitutional laws from being passed -- otherwise the war on drugs could eventually turn into war against an inhumane U.S. government. Above all, free the sick people who've been imprisoned for smoking medical marijuana.      
[ Post Comment ]

Comment #7 posted by Medical-MJ-User on March 19, 2000 at 11:04:15 PT
American: a prison without bars
I happen to know quite a few people who are using pot for the same illnesses Orgeon will soon be including in their medical marijuana laws: Depression, Attention Deficit Disorder, Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome and insomnia. Until I learned about medical marijuan on the Net and started smoking MJ six months ago, I didn't think ANYTHING would help me and that one day I'd lose my struggle to survive, one lasting many decades (a big expense to insurance companies and for me personally). Depression is the 8th leading cause of death.Over the last few decades I've tried many, many medications and none worked - NONE. A couple of puffs of marijuana helps immensely. I'm now getting excellent relief from extreme suicidal ideation. I thank people on the NET for helping me to become aware of medical marijuana. It's been established that thee medical illnesses listed above BIOCHEMICAL in nature and must to be treated biochemically. There are fewer hard drug users in Holland because MJ actually alleviates the NEED for hard drugs. If aspirin works, you don't need to take Tylenol with codein. If marijuana works, there's no need to take hard drugs. That's the bottom line.  If anyone in the White House is reading this message, please inform your colleagues that medical marijuana is more akin to the aspirin analogy above and should be decriminalized in ALL states so that doctors can finally help people with illnesses that are NOT helped by pharmaceutical medications.Stop unconstitutional laws from being passed -- otherwise the war on drugs could eventually turn into war against an inhumane U.S. government. Above all, free the sick people who've been imprisoned for smoking medical marijuana.      
[ Post Comment ]

Comment #6 posted by Medical-MJ-User on March 19, 2000 at 10:52:31 PT
American: a prison without bars
I happen to know quite a few people who are using pot for the same illnesses Orgeon will soon be including in their medical marijuana laws: Depression, Attention Deficit Disorder, Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome and insomnia. Until I started smoking MJ six months ago, I didn't think ANYTHING would help me and that I'd lose my struggle to survive which has gone on many decades (a big expense to insurance companies and for me). These illnesses causes one to be dysfunctional and you to lose the motivation to live. Depression is the 8th leading cause of death.Over the last few decades I've tried many, many medications and none worked - NONE. A couple of puffs of marijuana helps immensely. I'm now getting excellent relief from extreme suicidal ideation. It's been established that all these problems are BIOCHEMICAL in nature and must to be treated biochemically. There are fewer hard drug users in Holland because MJ actually alleviates the NEED for hard drugs. If aspirin works, you don't need to take Tylenol with codein. If marijuana works, there's no need to take hard drugs. That'sthe bottom line.  If anyone in the White House is reading this message, please inform your colleagues that medical marijuana should be decriminalized in ALL states so that doctors can finally help people with illnesses that are NOT helped by pharmaceutical medications.Let medical marijuana users smoke to alleviate suffering AND STOP UNCONSTITUTIONAL laws from being passed.      
[ Post Comment ]

Comment #5 posted by Thoams Alexander on March 17, 2000 at 09:18:32 PT:
Pot-Info band
 As long as we are cowards and do nothing to protect our rights, this will continue. Soon the only way we will have to talk to our government will be with guns and fire and all out vingence! I like this country. And I don't want to see this happen. I have given many years of service to this country and I am angered by these continuos acts of agression against us.I am an American citizen and demand to be treated with respect! My final act in this life may be to die for freedom! It's worth it!   T.E.A. 
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Comment #4 posted by Mark Jepson on January 21, 2000 at 18:21:31 PT:
A good argument"Its your fault"
  My father was head of Psychiatry at the largest county hosptital in Minneapolis, Minnesota for 26 years. Henn Cty Med Center, where he was the best in his field. He was in charge of 20 doctors and over 200 patients and invalids.  What was his view on drugs??  "Your mouth gets you in more trouble than anything else in the world. What you say, and what you put in it."  My dad believed pot would make me a no-body in life, but he believed that drugs or anything else you do, you do of your own free will and you may have to pay the consequences.  The point I want to express is that if you KNOW your going to get addicted-->that's YOUR faultif you commit a crime stealing for more drugs-->it's YOUR fault when you get caught.if you eat too much chocalate cake-->it's your fault you got an upset tummyWe should all be free to screw-up our own lives, it's your fault, deal with itBURNING BOOKS==FACISM  
Welcome
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Comment #3 posted by J.R. Bob Dobbs on January 19, 2000 at 11:27:25 PT:
One down, nine to go...
  This reminds me of an article from an old issue of High Times, where the author read through the Bill of Rights and for each one, listed examples of how the War on Some Drugs had trampled the intentions of our forefathers.  I wonder how they plan to deal with sites like http://www.theflow.nl/ - which is the kind of site they would ban, except it's in The Netherlands, which is the last country in the world which is going to go along with this. Will U.S. citizens still be able to access Dutch sites like this one? Will http://www.hightimes.com have to relocate to a Dutch server?  I also like how the Library of Congress' web site is named Thomas, after Thomas Jefferson, who, if I remember correctly, grew hemp on his plantation.  Want to legalize it? Throw your seeds on a politician's lawn!
[ Post Comment ]

Comment #2 posted by Mark Tide on January 18, 2000 at 16:15:02 PT:
Time to Contact Your Congress-Person
This piece of law is obviously crafted as a device to suppress freedom of expression, misleadingly, SINISTERLY labelled to enable it to pass the U.S. Senate without dissent. Similar to the banking industry reporting law proposed last year, the "Know Your Customer Rule," this proposed law must be stopped. It's obviously up to everyone to lend a hand in this struggle. Our E-zine, Arcata Journal, has already called on our own Congress-Person and begun a process of insisting that he (and whoever else is required) act to prevent information available for Proposition 215 implementation purposes (in other words, almost ANY possible cannabis information) from being restricted regarding its internet access. Every Member of Congress should be contacted by their own constituents, demanding immediate relief from this nonsense.If the federal government bans internet cannabis information, it will also affect the entire publishing realm.This is a major issue, and we need to see some grass-roots action in the near future. Put out the word.
Arcata Journal
[ Post Comment ]

Comment #1 posted by kaptinemo on January 18, 2000 at 12:32:50 PT
Here we go, again
The pernciousness of this bill is unbelieveable.That ignorant Congress people and Senators vote for this trash, (and by doing so, urinate on the Constitution in toto) should surprise no one. They'd outlaw sex and rescind the Law of Gravity if they thought they could get away with it.The problem lies in inertia; if this is passed, those who want it will immediately swing into action, and the damage will be done long before the brakes can be applied by lawsuits and judicial review. In the meantime, people's lives will be ruined. And that is exactly what these goons have in mind. By the time the juggernaut of law enforcement is stopped, it will be too late, and any efforts at damage control will be pathetically unequal to the damage caused.The best thing to do is not to believe complacenetly in the self-rectifying aspects of the system. They are simply too slow. Nope, the time to act is *now*. Inform your representatives of the dangers involved (to the Constitution in general and to his or her political health in particular; *then* they listen) in this legislation. Otherwise, it may take years - and more money than any of us have to spend in lawsuits (another part of the plan) to set things right again.This thing is a vampire laying in the coffin, waiting for nightfall. Time to open the casket and give it what-for in the traditional style.
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