=== Todays Toon ===
Henry Brougham Loch, 1st Baron Loch GCMG, KCB (23 May 1827 – 20 June 1900) was a Scottish soldier and colonial administrator.=== Bible Quote ===
“he made known to us the mystery of his will according to his good pleasure, which he purposed in Christ, to be put into effect when the times reach their fulfillment—to bring unity to all things in heaven and on earth under Christ.”- Ephesians 1:9-10=== Headlines ===
Will Divided Government Find Common Ground on Immigration?With Republicans capturing the House and shrinking the Democratic majority in the Senate this week, President Obama's vision of sweeping changes to the immigration system has been clouded.
Squatters Setting Up Shop — In Your Home
SHATTERED DREAMS: The excitement of purchasing a new home at an auction can quickly turn to sadness when the previous tenants have not yet moved out
Obama Sees 'Win Win' Relations With India
Faced with a struggling economy at home, President Obama looks to put measures in place to bolster trade between the U.S. and India to benefit both countries
Get Him: Yemen Orders Arrest of Radical Cleric
Yemeni judge calls on security forces to deliver Anwar al-Awlaki — who's believed to be linked to several terror plots in the U.S. — dead or alive
Car bombs wound 34 in Iraq's Kirkuk
THREE car bombs exploded at dawn outside the homes of Patriotic Union of Kurdistan party officials in northern Iraq, wounding 34.
Nazi war criminal Seifert dead at 86
MICHAEL Seifert, a former Nazi SS prison guard known as "the beast of Bolzano" for his cruelty, died on Saturday in Italy aged 86.
Microsoft boss sheds company shares
MICROSOFT CEO Steve Ballmer has sold $US1.33 billion ($1.28bn) worth of shares in his own company.
Three abducted US boys found in Europe
THREE Californian boys who were abducted over two years ago found safe in the Netherlands and will be reunited with their mothers this weekend.
Pirates 'received millions for tanker'
SOMALI pirates say they've received a record $US9 million ransom for the release of a South Korean supertanker, Samho Dream, with crew.
Buyers fooled by low quotes
ALMOST one in three Sydney agents is misleading buyers, under-quoting by up to $100,000.
Commuters covered in train filth
SYDNEY'S rail commuters are sick of travelling on filthy trains, filing a flood of angry complaints.
Labor's pre-poll carnage
LABOR is preparing itself for a pre-Christmas bloodbath as the party attempts a Caucus clean-out.
Schools see sex claims up threefold
THE number of school employees under investigation over claims of sexual impropriety has tripled.
Plan to hide land valuation anger
SLEDGING Labor or threatening to go to the media will fast-track complaints to a land value hotline, a State Government document shows.
A playgroup for little miracles
THIS get-together of mothers with happy tots looks like any other, but it's no ordinary playgroup.
Secrecy shrouds bank boss loans
EXECUTIVES are taking huge loans with their own banks, refusing to say what interest they pay.
Search for Sydney's yummiest mummy
MANLY and Woollahra are among the suburbs vying for the title of Sydney's yummy-mummy capital.
Killer Watson blames the bends
HONEYMOON dive killer Gabe Watson suggested his former wife might have died from a rare case of ``spontaneous bends''.
Plan to hire out ambos to clubs
NIGHTCLUBS would pay for paramedics to be stationed at their venues under a controversial plan to ease pressure on the ambulance service and hospitals.
Church lords it over State LNP
A LIBERAL National Party MP says religious "happy clappers" wield extraordinary power within the party.
Toy dogs on most dangerous list
PINT-sized chihuahuas and pomeranians have been declared dangerous under new laws aimed at slowing Queensland's rising number of dog attacks.
Bligh's finger in pie battle
ANNA Bligh has intervened to give Yatala Pie Shop almost $35,000 in signage after the owners, who live in her electorate, were knocked back on safety grounds.
Outbreak as parents snub vaccine
PARENTS who refuse to vaccinate their children are contributing to the worst whooping cough outbreak on record in Queensland, with more than 7000 cases.
Shocking service from power firms
CONSUMER watchdogs are alarmed at the poor performance of energy companies in handling customer complaints.
Miss a payment, lose your house
BANKS are ramping up repossessions of properties, selling off Queenslanders' homes for mortgage repayment debts as low as $3000.
'Bring back the smack'
ALMOST nine in 10 Queenslanders believe it is OK to smack children, the Sunday Mail-Nine News State of Families survey has found.
One dead in traffic smash
POLICE and emergency services have been called to the scene of a traffic crash at Reedy Creek Road, Burleigh Waters.
Sex pest takes high road home
SEX offender James O'Brien McCulloch, 53, has walked free from jail and is on his way home to Scotland.
Dodgy taxi drivers cop blast
DODGY taxi drivers are ripping off unsuspecting customers and driving under the influence, new documents reveal.
Tamed Tiger back wiser and poorer
TIGER Woods is returning to Melbourne, the city where it all started to go wrong for him, for this week's Masters.
Greens told to cough up costings
VICTORIAN taxpayers would pay more than more than $20 billion to cover the cost of policies presented by the Victorian Greens.
Crime matriarch in health scare
JUDY Moran has been rushed from prison to hospital with a heart complaint.
Style first past post
ALMOST 80,000 racing fans made the most of the sunshine and proved the enduring popularity of Stakes Day.
Pallas' food bill hard to digest
BRUMBY Government minister Tim Pallas has been forced to defend his spending on food on a European trip.
Man nearly drowns saving toy boat
A POLICE helicopter was needed to winch a man from a Melbourne lake after he fell in while trying to rescue a remote controlled boat.
Melbourne welcomes Hillary
MELBOURNE put on a warm welcome as US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived amid tight security.
Street support a tall order
PLANNING Minister Justin Madden faces a revolt from his neighbours over suburban high-rise developments being built across Melbourne.
Man killed standing in middle of highway
A MAN has died in the North Territory after being struck by a vehicle while he was standing in the middle of the Stuart Highway.
Man dies on Jetstar flight
AN elderly passenger has died after going into cardiac arrest on a Jetstar flight from Singapore to Adelaide.
The town they killed with a pen
THE Town That Time Forgot is being honoured this weekend, 40 years after a State Government sentenced it to extinction.
Spat over voting rights
LORD mayoral candidate Ralph Clarke has accused political rival Francis Wong of exploiting international students to boost his chances for election.
Bikie sues council over speed hump
ONE of the state's most notorious bikies is suing a suburban council for negligence after falling off his motorcycle while riding over a speed hump.
From gold to dust
COMMONWEALTH Games gold medallist Dale Parker's cycling career could be in jeopardy after an alleged drink driving accident in Mt Barker.
Driver walks away from car rollover
A MAN in his late 40s walked away from a car rollover at St Peters, relatively unscathed.
Teen struck by falling light pole
A MT Barker teenager has suffered serious head injuries after being struck by a light pole, which was rammed by an alleged drunk driver
Rottnest oil exploration approved
AN oil company has a licence to drill off Rottnest Island - and exploration could go ahead within six months.
Anger at power bosses' pay hike
POWER bosses have been handed another pay rise just months after they received tens of thousands of dollars in bonuses.
Jasmine set to shine on Telethon
PINT-SIZED singing virtuoso Jasmine Clarke will open Telethon next Saturday night, with an inspiring rendition of What a Wonderful World. INSIDE: Watch her sing
Backpack hostel for Fremantle jail
BACKPACKERS will replace lawbreakers as Fremantle Prison is set to become a hostel with up to 200 beds.
WA's killer bed-care crisis
WA has the least number of intensive-care beds in Australia.
Police working on 32 unsolved murders
SUBURBAN detectives are being used to swell the ranks of the Major Crime Squad, amid a spate of murders in WA that has alarmed senior police.
English tests for foreign nurses
FOREIGN nurses will have to pass tough new English tests and answer questions on Australian issues such as dung beetles to work in WA hospitals.
Teens charged over hammer attack
POLICE have charged two teenagers after a man was left with serious eye injuries in a hammer attack at an out-of-control party at Beeliar in Perth's south.
Men sprayed in face with acid
TWO men were rushed to hospital after they were sprayed in the face with acid early this morning.
WA road toll reaches 150
A 21-YEAR-OLD woman has become the 150th fatality on the state’s roads this year after a car rollover in the Goldfields town of Kambalda last night.
Nothing new
=== Comments ===
Border policy as leaky as smugglers’ boatsPiers Akerman
PRIME Minister Julia Gillard last week took ownership of a new record for asylum-seeker arrivals. - It is not because Gillard does not know what to do. She is not incompetent. It is because she is deliberately doing the wrong thing for corrupt reasons, and she is not being challenged to justify it. When asked about the issues, so as to provide a window dressing suggestive of competence on behalf of the Canberra Journalists whose job it is to laud ALP leaders, Gillard and her ALP mates lie, saying tht their policy is effective but the times are difficult and blaming Mr Howard.
The ALP is profiting from the misery of people. Some die. All are exploited by pirates. The ALP get a fancy headline. But that isn’t all. The contacts the ALP makes means they can be players on the world stage in a host of ways honest people are not aware. Rudd bungled a special forces sting in Timor and nearly got the leadership of Timor killed a few years ago. He wouldn’t have been able to do that without the links with the underworld through such corrupt operations as people smuggling. There are laws that protect the lawful, the ALP have broken them. - ed.
===
Nancy Pelosi Will Not Concede Anything
By Bill O'Reilly
As you may know, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi is out. The new speaker will be Ohio Republican Congressman John Boehner.
But Mrs. Pelosi is not conceding a thing. She told Diane Sawyer she has no regrets.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
REP. NANCY PELOSI, SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE: We express pride in the work that we had done, sadness over the loss of the members who would not be returning, but, again, no regrets. And we feel very confident about the decisions that we made, that are in the interest of reducing the deficit, creating jobs, enabling American people to reach their fulfillment with the liberation they get from having health care, the consumer protections that they have.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
So let's take a close look at the speaker's statement:
NO. 1: She did nothing to reduce the deficit, which is at record levels. So that's totally bogus.
NO. 2: She may have wanted to create jobs in America, but she and her party failed in that attempt.
NO. 3: The "reaching fulfillment through liberation" deal confuses me because I am a simple man. In my world, I am liberated. As for fulfillment, I think that's what happens in the afterlife, with apologies to Bill Maher.
The one point that Mrs. Pelosi may have is consumer protection. There must be strict federal oversight on Wall Street and the health insurance companies.
That doesn't mean intruding into the private marketplace, but it does mean the feds must set up rules of conduct. You can't be selling phony mortgage investments or throwing sick people off the rolls. Americans must have protections in those matters.
But mostly Nancy Pelosi is devoid of reality because she has created her own world -- a bubble world. A world where everyone she knows thinks the way she does. Call it the San Francisco syndrome.
Unfortunately, many politicians in both parties have separated themselves from reality. That might even be true of President Obama, who believes his polices will eventually work. But so did Jimmy Carter, along with Warren Harding.
It is up to us, the American people, to ascertain whether our leaders are living in the real world or the bubble world, because the bubble world can get people killed and can lead to economic devastation.
I have never met Speaker Pelosi. She will not speak with me because I would intrude on her bubble word, and she knows it.
BOTTOM LINE: Some of the most powerful people in America simply cannot grasp reality. I mean, how frightening is that?
Now for a personal note about the election. Democratic consultant Penny Lee won a bet with me when I said Harry Reid would lose:
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
O'REILLY: Are you willing to bet on this race?
PENNY LEE, DEMOCRATIC STRATEGIST: Absolutely.
O'REILLY: Yes?
LEE: Absolutely. Harry Reid is going to be returning back as the majority leader of the Senate.
O'REILLY: All right, now, I have a lot of bets going out but that's all right. How about $1,000 to Doctors Without Borders?
(END VIDEO CLIP)
So Ms. Lee won, and here's the check. We're giving $10,000 to Doctors Without Borders, not $1,000. When I'm wrong, I'm wrong. And that is a very fine charity.
===
Did Dem Donations Score Final KO on Keith Olbermann?
By Dan Gainor
The Mouth That Roared is suddenly silent. When MSNBC host Keith Olbermann put his money where his mouth is, he also bit the hand that feeds him.
The episode has caused the latest of many KO-inspired media feeding frenzies where he calls former President Bush bad a “fascist” or compares conservative star Michelle Malkin to a “mashed-up bag of meat with lipstick on it.” Olbermann was suspended indefinitely without pay because he gave new meaning to the idea of pay for play. He gave $2,400 each to three Democratic candidates – all while claiming he’s not “liberal” and complaining Fox News was supporting the GOP.
Even the most lefty network in the universe had to swallow its pride and suspend him. NBC execs claim KO violated journalistic standards that no one – left or right – felt applied to him because only NBC actually considered him a journalist. Actually, few even considered him sane, luckily not a job requirement at MSNBC. His nightly bile was so laughable that he was a self caricature. When “Good Will Hunting” star Ben Affleck lampooned Olbermann on “Saturday Night Live,” he couldn’t muster rants near as outlandish as the real thing. It was such a sad exercise, Affleck made himself laugh.
Now, Olbermann’s many targets get the latest if not the last laugh. The question that remains might not be when does he leave, but where next? Can the tempestuous (fancy term for screaming loon) host ever find a network to call home? He’s played for more teams than a journeyman utility infielder or even Lady Gaga. From local TV outlets to CNN, ESPN, Fox Sports Net, ABC Radio, baseball and football and not-so-finally MSNBC. To give you a hint of how prickly he is, in 2002, he wrote a 2,000-word “mea culpa” about his “tumultuous” departure from ESPN. Next up, a mama mea culpa, I guess, about his latest disaster.
Lefties have gathered 135,000+ signatures for MSNBC to keep him and predictable libs from Rolling Stone’s Matt Taibbi to Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT, have risen in his defense. But he remains on thin ice. Without the combination of Olbermann’s biting wit and MSNBC’s audience that will swallow anything, the question may be which one will bite the dust first.
Still it’s also true that you can count him down, but don’t count him out just yet.
Dan Gainor is The Boone Pickens Fellow and the Media Research Center’s Vice President for Business and Culture. His column appears each week on The Fox Forum. He can also be contacted on FaceBook and Twitter as dangainor.
===
When will Gillard stop what Gillard unleashed?
Andrew Bolt
Julia Gillard says she wrote the blueprint of the 2008 ”reforms” to our boat people laws which triggered the new rush of boats.
What will she now do to stop them again, especially after having weakened the laws again?
IMMIGRATION detainee numbers more than doubled in one year while the cost of protecting Australian borders has skyrocketed, according to an official government report.(My red dot on the Department of Immigration graph above indicates the day the Rudd Government announced it was weakening the boat people laws.)
The figures were revealed in a week when all records were eclipsed for asylum seekers arriving in Australia by boat.
The record was broken with the interception of two small boats north of Christmas Island on Thursday afternoon and again on Friday with the arrival of another boat carrying up to 25 passengers.
It was the fifth such arrival in four days and takes the number of asylum seekers approaching Australian shores so far this year to 5852, surpassing the 2001 record.
The latest detainee figures are revealed in the Australian Customs and Border Protection Service annual report for 2009-10.
During this period there was a 123 per cent increase in the number of people held in immigration detention facilities around Australia and on Christmas Island - from 4397 in 2008-09 to 9802 people in 2009-10. In the same period, 8749 people were taken into immigration detention compared with 3977 the previous year, an increase of 120 per cent. Of the 8749 people taken into immigration detention during 2009-10:
(Thanks to readers Shelley and Pira.)
UPDATE
Yet another:
A boat carrying 81 suspected asylum seekers has been intercepted off Christmas Island.Julia Gillad last month announced she’d open a new detention centre in Inverbrackie, in South Australia, to hold 400 of the boat people she can no longer squeeze into Christmas Island.
This latest boat means that in just five days, six boats have brought in 328 boat people - or almost one Inverbrackie a week.
===
Really?
Andrew Bolt
Readers of the Weekend Australian, many of them bravely struggling with blindness, vote on the best and most beautiful buildings of Australia.
The scary thing is that they may be right.
(Thanks to reader marg of nambour.)
===
Alice dancing under the gallows
Andrew Bolt
(Thanks to reader Kevin.)
===
Zoo trip a bummer
Andrew Bolt
Green naggers and hysterics are turning even a Melbourne Zoo trip into a guilt trip instead. Reader Tom sends me the pictures:
===
How the US prostrated itself to the UN’s worst
Andrew Bolt
How the United Nations elevates tyrannies to the status of democracies - this time with the active help of Barack Obama:
The Obama administration got a new “shellacking” this morning, this one entirely voluntary. In the name of improving America’s image abroad, it sent three top officials from the State Department to Geneva’s U.N. Human Rights Council to be questioned about America’s human rights record by the likes of Cuba, Iran, and North Korea.(Thanks to reader Alan RM Jones.)
This was the first so-called “universal periodic review” of human rights in the U.S. by the Council, which the Obama administration decided to join in 2009.
The move represents a striking departure from prior American foreign policy, which has been to ratify selected human rights treaties after due consideration and submit American policy-makers to recommendations based on well-conceived standards accepted by the United States…
This morning fifty-six countries lined-up for the opportunity to have at the U.S. representatives, many standing in line overnight a day ago in order to be near the top of the list. Making it to the head of the line were Cuba, Venezuela, Russia, Iran, Nicaragua, Bolivia, and North Korea.
Recommendations to improve the U.S. human rights record included Cuba’s advice to end “violations against migrants and mentally ill persons” and “ensure the right to food and health.”
Iran – currently poised to stone an Iranian woman for adultery – told the U.S. “effectively to combat violence against women.”
North Korea – which systematically starves a captive population – told the U.S. “to address inequalities in housing, employment and education” and “prohibit brutality…by law enforcement officials.”
Libya complained about U.S. “racism, racial discrimination and intolerance.”
The U.S. delegation was at pains to impress the international crowd. Esther Brimmer, Assistant Secretary, Bureau of International Organizations, told the assembled: “it is an honor to be in this chamber.”
===
President Polite
Andrew Bolt
No one can fault his personal grace. Here’s Bush explaining why he’ll treat Obama as he’d liked former presidents to have treated him.
(Thanks to reader Spencer de Vere.)
===
Gillard’s spluttering presentation
Andrew Bolt
Julia Gillard’s coughing fit in her interview with Laurie Oakes on Channel 9 this morning is just one of those meaningless annoyances. Unfortunately, with all the scrutiny on her now for ragged performance, it isn’t what she needed to project strength and authority.
Her response to Oakes’ gentle question on the point of her own emissions trading system now that even Barack Obama has dumped his was especially pathetic, involving a parade of slogans - -including the increasingly dishonest “in the national interest” - without at all addressing the substance of a vital question. In what way is it in our national interest to hurt our competitiveness to set an example on cutting emissions that every one of the biggest emitters - China, the US and India - have explicitly said they will not follow?
Gillard’s presentation has gone from clever spin to stupidly obvious evasion. And people hate being treated as fools.
UPDATE
Video here.
(Thanks to reader billyg.)
===
Hear no evil
Andrew Bolt
The US State Department transcribers choose not to hear their boss, Hillary Clinton, address Kevin Rudd in their joint press conference in Melbourne as “Prime Minister”:
So again, (inaudible) Minister Rudd, thank you for your partnership and friendship and I look forward to a very productive visit.UPDATE
Maybe Clinton’s speechwriter is the State Department is to blame for working off the State Department’s own background notes:
Principal Government Officials(Thanks to reader Ashley.)
Governor General--Quentin Bryce
Prime Minister--Kevin Rudd
===
Baillieu wins, but who’s counting?
Andrew Bolt
I was in Sydney and missed Friday’s debate between Premier John Brumby and Opposition Leader Ted Baillieu. - Bolt has never written approvingly of Baillieu - ed
===
This will take just 10 minutes of your time
Andrew Bolt
What information are they after?
Controversy has erupted over the revelation that South African census takers will be supplied with condoms before they visit households.Maybe they just don’t want the census data on population to be out of date nine months later.
(Thanks to skeptical69 .)
===
On judges sacking politicians
Andrew Bolt
It’s very dangerous when courts can overturn the election even of a race-baiting liar, so I may have to try to defend the right of former immigration minister Phil Woolas to disgrace the British Parliament with his presence:
Phil Woolas, the former immigration minister, has been thrown out of Parliament and the Labour Party after breaking electoral law by making up damaging allegations about his main general election opponent...It’s true Woolas acted shamefully:
Two High Court judges made the historic decision to overturn the result of May’s ballot in Mr Woolas’s constituency, the first such ruling for 99 years, and order a by-election.
The ruling means Mr Woolas will be barred from standing for public office for three years, and he could face criminal charges after a file on the case was sent to the Director of Public Prosecutions.
He said he would fight the court’s decision but Labour immediately disowned him for “telling lies” and said it would not support his appeal. The result of the election in Oldham and Saddleworth — which Mr Woolas won by just 103 votes — had been challenged by Elwyn Watkins, the defeated Liberal Democrat who accused the MP of exploiting racial tensions in the area by falsely claiming Mr Watkins was courting Islamic extremists.
Mr Justice Nigel Teare and Mr Justice Griffith Williams ruled that Mr Woolas had breached electoral law by knowingly making false statements about his opponent....
Mr Justice Teare and Mr Justice Griffith Williams ruled that Mr Woolas was guilty of three illegal practices, contrary to the Representation of the People Act 1983.
They said that in one leaflet Mr Woolas alleged Mr Watkins had “attempted to woo, that is, to seek the electoral support of Muslims who advocated violence”.
Another suggested the Liberal Democrat “is willing to condone threats of violence in pursuit of personal advantage”.
Mr Woolas also suggested his rival was “untrustworthy” by falsely claiming he did not live in the constituency. In all three of these cases, the judges said the allegations were false and Mr Woolas had no grounds for believing them to be true.
Mr Woolas and his supporters claimed yesterday’s decision would have a “chilling” effect, with candidates afraid to criticise their opponents.
A second pamphlet, called The Rose, was published the day before the election and contained “an even more toxic statement”, Mr Watkins’s legal team argued, because it falsely suggested the Liberal Democrat was being backed by groups that had issued death threats against Mr Woolas.But this pamphlet was also criticised:
This was a “Lib Dem pact with the devil”, the leaflet said.
Other members of the campaign team expressed serious concerns about the “upsetting” content of the pamphlet, in particular a picture of extremists holding a sign saying “behead those who insult Islam” which had been taken in London four years earlier.I’d have thought that images which are true enough of British Muslims threatening jihad against their fellow citizens were indeed part of a legitimate - if inflammatory - debate about Islam, immigration and multiculturalism:
The sole justification for these attacks, according to Mr Watkins’s legal team, was the false claim that he had backed a ban on arms sales to Israel and not a ban on arms sales to the Palestinian territories. In fact, Mr Watkins had said he would ban arms sales to both sides.
And I wonder if, in the end, it is not just the lies but the subject of the lies that has made Woolas the first MP in a century to be stripped of his seat by a judge.
Take our own campaign, It is absurd to even suggest a judge should intervene in our own election, decided by just one or two seats, on the grounds that Labor knowingly told lies about its opponents.
That Labor did so is beyond dispute.For instance, how often did Julia Gillard claim that Tony Abbott would bring back WorkChoices, something he not only ruled out but had clearly no interest in doing, or even the power to do? How many times did Labor falsely claim its new mining tax would raise $10.5 billion in its first two years? That it would build a detention centre in East Timor? That it would rule out a carbon tax? That it would set up a Citizens Assembly on global warming?
At least some of those preposterous claims were simply lies. Yet they were lies that are best left for voters to adjudicate on, and not judges. After all, voters may even prefer a liar to represent them, or may consider the lies utterly irrelevant to their argument. They may think the lies of one side are balanced out by those of the other. They may even feel that a losing candidate who then unseats their local member by taking the fight to a court may be just the kind of person they don’t want.
And then there’s the real risk that a no-lies law may be enforced or upheld very inconsistently - in line with the political culture of the juducial and media class, rather than of the citizenry generally. In this case, a liar warning about the risk of rising Islamism would be more likely to have the court punish him than would a liar saying more immigration will make Britain more tolerant.
So Woolas is hardly someone any of us would wish to defend. He is a liar and a cheat, and probably a defamer and a race-baiter, too. But he was also elected by the people - probably on a lie, it is true, and yet…
One more thing: Surely, to minimise the risks I’ve discussed, the role of the court should at the very least be limited to exposing the lie, overturning the election, and then letting the voters decide again - without also banning the lying candidate from contesting that election, or any other, for three years? To actually strip voters of their right to pass their own verdict on the liar is going way too far, since it’s the courts telling voters that even if they want a Woolas, the judges have decided they may not have him
(Thanks to reader Blind Freddy.) - Bolt is very worried about a Labor politician being mistreated. - ed.
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