Japo-World

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13/11/2024

How far can you joke around? The challenge of official identification is incredible!

I’m sure it’s true worldwide, but photos for official identification cards cannot be used if they do not resemble the person they are supposed to be. For example, if you wear too much make-up, you will be asked to remove it, and your clothes and wig will also be problematic.

These photos though. They are incredible as official driver’s license photos! In the first photo, the man has a chonmage. The license center staff can't say anything about it because he made the style with his hair and not a wig. That’s not overdoing it perhaps, but for his license renewal, he took the second picture. He no longer looks like an earthling at this point.

Naturally, he was told to remove it for the license renewal photo, but this is a tattoo that can’t be removed. He was asked again and again if it really couldn’t be removed, and he said that it couldn’t be. The license officer couldn't say anything, and the photo was taken as it was.

It would have been impossible to identify him if he had been told to wear skin-coloured make-up, wouldn't it?

He has this driver’s license and he goes about his daily life looking like this. Would you go to this extreme for a license photo? Japanese driver’s licenses are renewed every three to five years, so there is a lot of anticipation for his next photo!

ABE KENGO
https://jp.japo.news/contents/beauty/158258.html .tab=0

23/10/2024

You can’t die in Tokyo? Why are cremation fees 15 times higher than neighboring areas?

When a person dies in Japan, their body must be cremated. In Tokyo, however, cremation costs have risen so much that it has become difficult to pay funeral fees. Why is this happening only in Tokyo?

In almost all cases in Japan, the deceased are cremated and their remains are placed in a grave. However, as it is not a legal requirement, the remains can be buried as they are, but permission is required from the local authority where the burial is to occur. There are quite a few municipalities that grant this permission, and in urban areas such as Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya, cremation is mandatory in these areas as burials are prohibited.
そこで気になるのが火葬費用。
東京23区、つまり東京の中心エリアの火葬費用は現在、90,000円。
2021年には59,000円だったことを考えると急激に値段が上がっている事がわかります。
近隣では例えば千葉県千葉市の場合、6,000円ですので、なんと15倍。
同じ東京でも郊外の立川市や府中市などは無料。
これを見ると物価上昇とは全く違う要因で値段が上がっていることがわかります。
これ、なぜだかご存知ですか?
This is where cremation costs are of concern. The cost of cremation in the 23 wards of Tokyo, i.e. the central area of Tokyo, is currently 90,000 yen. Considering that it was 59,000 yen in 2021, it is evident that the cost has risen rapidly.
In neighboring areas, for example in Chiba City, Chiba Prefecture, the price is 6,000 yen, which is as much as 15 times lower. In the same Tokyo area, suburban cities such as Tachikawa and Fuchu are free. This shows that prices are rising due to a completely different factor from rising costs. Do you know why this is?

There are nine crematoriums in the 23 wards of Tokyo, seven of which are private companies, and the rule is that these companies can set the prices. This is where a Chinese company spotted the problem and bought up these crematoriums, causing the prices to rise dramatically.

Can we get a competing company?
In other industries, if you raise the prices to this level, the competition would come along and lower the prices, but crematoriums are problematic, as they are not easy to build.
It is not easy to build a new crematorium because they are prone to protests by residents in the area where it is to be built. Therefore, those who have taken the market share win. In effect, they have no choice but to do as they are told because cremation is mandatory.

The current law in Japan does not allow for price regulation, but this means that they can only do as they say if they raise prices even further. Yes, dying in Tokyo also costs big money, and Chinese companies have become the sole winners.
There is no other way but to amend the law or for the Tokyo Metropolitan Government to cooperate with the residents to build a public crematorium.
This situation makes it a city where one cannot even die in peace. Even though are not breaking the law, are these companies going too far?

ABE KENGO


https://jp.japo.news/contents/business/158252.html .tab=0

15/10/2024

Japan’s capital city is in the worst place. Did Tokyo have the worst environment?

When people overseas picture Japan, I think that Tokyo comes to mind for them. Tokyo is the political and economic center of the country, with a population of approximately 14 million. The Tokyo metropolitan area, which also includes Kanagawa, Saitama, and Chiba, has a population of 37.8 million, making it one of the largest cities in the world.

Part of present-day Tokyo used to be called Edo, and it has been the center of Japan since that time and has always been one of the most populated cities in the world.

However, did you know that Tokyo used to be a terrible environment to live in? Its history reveals the mystery of why a metropolis was built in the worst possible place.

The worst place full of disasters

Japan is an earthquake-prone country, but there are places in Japan that are resistant to earthquakes. Okayama Prefecture, for example, is an area where the ground is stable and very resistant to earthquake disasters. Tokyo, on the other hand, is a place that is susceptible to earthquake damage, and earthquakes even happen directly beneath the city.

Mount Fuji is not far away, and the scenery is pretty, but it is an active volcano, and it is not known when it will next erupt. It has erupted many times in the past and the damage caused by its volcanic ash even reached as far as Edo.

The city was ordered to be built in the Tokyo region

It was a samurai named Tokugawa Ieyasu who created Edo, the foundation of the city of Tokyo. He united all the samurai in Japan, and Tokyo became the center of Japan, but he did not choose Tokyo for himself. He was given the order to build a city in Tokyo at a time when there were still samurai in power above him. He worked hard to develop a place where he was not originally from.

Why didn’t it move?

After Tokugawa became head of state, he would have had the power to move the capital. The reason why he did not do so was because of its distance from the emperor’s family.

At the time, the emperor’s family was based in Kyoto and basically, the leader of Japan was the emperor. Tokugawa was commissioned by the emperor to rule Japan, but if the location was closer to Kyoto, there would be interference from the Emperor's family, so he developed the place as it was.

When the Edo era period ended and politics returned to a new emperor-centered system, the emperor moved to Edo, one of the most developed cities in the world, and renamed it Tokyo, where it remains to this day.

Isn’t Tokyo the capital city?

We have been talking about the capital for a long time, but did you know that the capital of Japan is not Tokyo? Other countries have a constitution that defines the capital, but Japan's constitution does not. Therefore, Tokyo is “the city that functions as the capital”.

There have been several talks about moving this capital to another part of the country, but everything has become so concentrated there that it has not been possible to move it.

Tokyo is also susceptible to earthquake damage and typhoons, which increase in strength year by year, so it may be necessary to consider relocating the capital or dispersing Tokyo's functions to other cities in the future.

I am from Tokyo, so I don't want to see the city become desolate, but there are ongoing discussions about relocating the capital's functions.

The city of Tokyo also has some old, unmanageable towns, so it may be the right time for/ a fresh start in a new place.

ABE KENGO
https://jp.japo.news/contents/news/158246.html .tab=0

03/10/2024

The birth of the devil’s fruit! Has it become real at last?

One Piece is a manga, anime, and film series that has become extremely popular worldwide. In the manga, many people have gained special abilities by eating the “Devil's Fruit”.

There seems to be a Japanese person who has created it. Here it is:

The workmanship is convincing to all who see it. The image has not been Photoshopped or edited by other means.

The melon can be carved when the fruit is still small and then allowed to grow to create this pattern.

In One Piece, the Devil's Fruit is not considered tasty, but this one looks delicious. Unfortunately, you don't seem to acquire any special abilities from eating it.

It took around five hours to carve the pattern in this melon. If they were mass-produced, would people buy them at a high price?

ABE KENGO


https://jp.japo.news/contents/cuisine/158242.html .tab=0

29/09/2024

Kotodama (the spirit of words). Will believers be saved?

Japan has an ancient belief called “kotodama” (the spirit/power of words). The idea is that words uttered from the mouth have a mystical power and their benefits appear after they are spoken. It may be similar to prayers in other religions.

In this article, I will talk about kotodama.

The concept of kotodama is still alive today

Even among modern Japanese people, who have lost the idea of kotodama, some are careful about the words they choose. For example, if you were speaking in front of a student who was going to take an examination, you mustn’t use the words ‘slip’ or ‘fall’ (both of these words can mean “fail” in Japanese).

Saying ‘cut’ or ‘end’ in front of a person who has a new girlfriend or boyfriend is another example of kotodama that has remained.

Kotodama from the anime, Jujutsu Kaisen (Sorcery Battle)

If you are a fan of Japanese anime, you may have seen Jujutsu Kaisen. There is an important kotodama in this anime.

It is,

  “Furuube Yura Yura”布瑠部由良由良

This one can be expressed in modern Japanese characters. “Furube” means shaking treasure, and “yurayura” is an onomatopoeic word that sounds like the shaking of a treasure ball.

The original words were:

 一二三四五六七八九十(ひふみよいむなやここのたり)

 布瑠部由良由良止(ふるべゆらゆらと)布瑠部(ふるべ)

“Hi-fu-mi-yo-i-mu-na-ya-koko-no-tari

Furube yurayura to furube”

This long kotodama is a type of “harai-kotoba”. These are words used to purge evil and are a type of ritual prayer, used by Shinto priests when offering prayers on paper.

Don't worry, it won't summon up any horrible monsters like in the anime!

The legendary saying, “samhara”

https://jp.japo.news/contents/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Samuhara.jpg

Chanting the word “samhara” several times each day is said to avert misfortune and guide you on the right path.

A famous samurai named Kiyomasa Kato also inscribed these words on his Japanese sword, and some soldiers heading off to war also carried a piece of paper with samhara written on it.

This word, when written in characters, cannot be entered on a computer because the kanji (Chinese characters) are not found in modern Japanese. It is written in an obsolete script called “kamiyomoji”.

We have made a wallpaper-sized version for the iPhone, which you can download here if you are interested.

I can understand if some people wouldn’t believe that just saying words out loud can bring about positive effects, but it seems to me that negative things happen to people who say negative words all the time.

I think it is important to try to talk about positive things and not complain or moan about people.

I think this is a philosophical view rather than a religious one.

To remind myself of this feeling I use the image I just mentioned as my iPhone wallpaper and say it every day to try to keep my thoughts positive.

To those who complain about work or their spouse:

It doesn't have to be a Japanese kotodama, so why don't you say something positive and make everyone happy, including the people around you?

ABE KENGO

https://jp.japo.news/contents/culture/158238.html .tab=0

25/09/2024

More popular abroad than in Japan? What is so great about ukiyo-e?

Ukiyo-e are highly regarded as a traditional Japanese art form. I’m sure you have seen this ukiyo-e (above) before.

This is a piece by Katsushika Hokusai, a famous figure in the world of ukiyo-e.

It is part of “Fugaku Sanjurokkei” (Thirty-six views of Mount Fuji) and is one of his works depicting various views of the mountain. It is titled “Thirty-six views”, but he added more to make it a set of 46 pictures due to its popularity.

Including these pieces, ukiyo-e is more popular overseas than in Japan, especially in the West, and I would like to explain why this is the case.

What are ukiyo-e?

Ukiyo-e are Japanese woodblock prints that developed from the samurai period to around the Meiji period that followed. The word “ukiyo” (浮世絵) originated from the word of the same pronunciation, “ukiyo” (憂きの世), which means the sorrowful world in which we live, full of unpleasant things. Ukiyo-e (浮世絵) is said to have been named in this way so that people would paint fun things that would provide fun and entertainment for the viewers.

There are two types of woodblock prints and two types of brush paintings. Paintings are expensive because they are one-offs, but as they became woodblock prints and could be mass-produced, they became inexpensive for the general public to purchase and quickly became more popular.

At the time, the price in Japan was the equivalent of a bowl of soba noodles, so today it would be around 300 or 500 yen. Nowadays, even the cheapest ukiyo-e can cost up to 10,000 yen. Let’s take a look at their characteristics.

What are woodblock prints?

Woodblock prints are made by making a wooden plate for each color and layering them on top of each other. The colourful-looking woodblock-printed ukiyo-e prints are made by layering several colors. To do this, three professionals are involved in the process:

The first is the painter (“eshi”). Katsushika Hokusai was a painter. This person is the base painter.

The second person is the engraver (“horishi”). This is the person who creates the plates for each color.

The third is the printer (“surishi”), who uses the plates to actually complete the picture on paper.

How was it communicated abroad?

Have you ever wrapped a teacup or other breakable object in newspaper or other paper when carrying it? In the same way, the paper used to wrap tea bowls exported overseas was the first time this ukiyo-e artwork made its way abroad.

What looked like just packing material was actually artistic, and it became the talk of the town, and collectors started to appear in Europe.

What gave ukiyo-e their value?

First of all, the unique use of color seems to have attracted attention. The paints used in ukiyo-e are basically primary colors, without mixing, so the colours are vivid.

Another feature is the fineness of the lines, and the fact that each single hair is made by printmaking is also a major attraction. The technique used by the printer to create blurring is also a uniquely Japanese printmaking technique.

Ukiyo-e is said to have been created by a group of extraordinary technicians.

How to identify valuable ukiyo-e

It is common knowledge that famous painters are more expensive, but there are differences among them.

After the final version is completed, 300 sheets are worked on by a top-class printer in the presence of the painter, which makes them the most valuable.

These initial 300 sheets are free of discrepancies and the colours are carefully checked. After that, the prints are worked on by printers of a lower level, so there can be discrepancies, and the printing plate wears out during repeated printings. This can lead to areas where the lines become less clear. Naturally, the value drops.

The key is to look at the misalignment and clarity of the lines to determine if it is an early print. Also, precise copies exist, but these are of little value. Make sure to check the back of the paper. When the work is printed, the colours bleed through to the reverse side of the prin. This is proof that the print is a genuine woodblock print.

Another feature is that the names of the engraver and printer are written on the edge of the paper, which is hidden when the print is framed.

Incidentally, the work shown at the beginning of this article was the highest-priced ukiyo-e ever sold, fetching around 100 million yen at a French auction in 2017.

Although time has passed since their manufacture, ukiyo-e prints are still being discovered. Valuable pieces may lie in old Japanese houses. Tokyo was largely burnt down in the war, but rural houses have great potential.

It might be interesting to make friends who live in the Japanese countryside and search for ukiyo-e together!

ABE KENGO


https://jp.japo.news/contents/culture/158225.html .tab=0

24/09/2024

Bushido 5: Hagakure – The Samurai Mind

There is a book called “Hagakure”, which should be called a textbook for samurai.

In this article, I would like to share with you what is written in it regarding how a samurai should be.



Be prepared to be a samurai! How to hone your resolve
It is said that the important thing for a samurai is to choose death when considering whether to live or die. Live today as if it is the last day of your life and focus only on fulfilling what you have to accomplish.

By preparing yourself for death and facing it, you will understand who you really are.

It is written that Bushido is the essence of mortality itself.

It is said that it is difficult to defeat a samurai who is on the brink of death no matter how many people there are. It is important to have faith in yourself and believe that you can do it.

Simply living an ordinary life will not accomplish great tasks. Preparing and acting out of the ordinary is the key to success. When one is prepared to die, one demonstrates the power to survive. Dying is not just wishing for the best, nor is it a rash act of becoming. It is about a maniacal focus on living.

It means not to think about anything else, including one's own life and death, except to focus on one thing to accomplish one's goal. It is said that the samurai were able to live each day with care because death was close at hand.

Living carefully means the way one's mind, language, and behavior are in daily life.

That is why the movements and language of the samurai are never violent, but beautiful.

There is no past or future, this moment should be lived to the fullest, and the samurai's resolve is to risk everything in that moment.

Application to modern times
In this day and age, we are bombarded with relentless information through the Internet. We are influenced by this information, and our hearts are shaken. I believe that you can be successful today if you have the same "determination" in your work, personal life, and interpersonal relationships as the samurai did.

If the past is irrelevant, then any unpleasant feelings you received from someone are also irrelevant. If the future also doesn’t matter, then how your relationship with that person will affect you in the future is also irrelevant. How should I interact with this person before me? If you can think like this, you will be able to live honestly with yourself without the need to lie. It will simplify your relationships, and then you will appear to be easy to understand and appeal to those around you.

Try to live with the resolve of a samurai, starting today, or rather, from this very moment.

I believe your life will change drastically.

志伝流―志伝飛龍

Shidenryu - Shiden Hiryu


https://jp.japo.news/contents/culture/158221.html .tab=0

23/09/2024

Japan is a safe country, but it is true that only umbrellas are stolen?!

Japan is a country where the probability of being robbed is low, even if you leave your bag alone at your table while you use the bathroom. A country where a person who picks up a wallet containing a large sum of money will deliver it to a police box.

However, did you know that there is one item that is stolen quite a lot in Japan? Plastic umbrellas that are sold in convenience stores have a particularly high rate of theft.

In this article I will explain the psychology behind why Japanese people steal umbrellas.

Plastic umbrellas available everywhere

A sudden downpour… It's a problem, isn't it? Plastic umbrellas come in handy at such times. There are more than 55,000 convenience stores in Japan. You can buy umbrellas at each of them, so you don't have to carry an umbrella with you in an emergency. They cost around 700 yen, so they are not expensive, but they are not cheap either. The big problem is that the plastic umbrellas that everyone has are almost always identical in design.

Umbrella stands at shop entrances are also problematic

Bringing wet umbrellas into the shop will make the inside dirty, so umbrellas are usually placed in an umbrella stand at the entrance before entering the shop.

Then, after shopping, customers leave the shop with their own umbrellas, but all the plastic umbrellas with the same design are often mistaken for each other so people can’t find their own umbrella! This is a common problem. Worse still, people take advantage of this situation by pretending to take an umbrella by mistake…

Japan is supposed to be peaceful, but for some reason only umbrellas are being stolen. The only way to prevent this is to make sure you know that your umbrella belongs to you. Put a sticker on it so that it stands out, and do not use plastic umbrellas that are hard to distinguish from others.

Don't be too overconfident in Japan and make sure you take your own defensive measures.

ABE KENGO

https://jp.japo.news/contents/culture/158217.html .tab=0

19/09/2024

The Japanese thinking of “necessary evil” (hitsuyo aku). You are not judged a bad person just because you have broken the law!

Thievery and murder are evil. However, there used to be a concept of "necessary evil" in Japan, in which people thought a crime was okay if it was for the better good.

Let's take a look at what acts were regarded as necessary evils. Were those who were doing things regarded as "necessary evils" actually doing good?

Nezumi Kozo

Famous thieves appeared in the Edo period, when samurai ruled Japan. At this time, Japan was a country where the gap between rich and poor was so great that some of the rich did evil deeds and increased their own money even to the detriment of others.

Nezumi Kozo (the nickname of Jirokichi Nakamura) is said to have stolen money from only such “bad rich people” and distributed the money to the poverty-stricken.

The story spread through novels and other media and was praised throughout Japan as an example of a necessary evil, but in reality, he spent most of his money on his entertainment. Unfortunately, it seems that his acts were not deemed necessary evils.

The money he stole was about 40 million yen in current value. He may have distributed a little of the remaining money he spent on himself to the poor, but in the end, he was executed.

The Yakuza

Organized violent groups in Japan are called “yakuza”. In this sense, they are the same as the mafia abroad. However, they were originally the parental figures in each locality, the people who would deal with any problems that the police or the state could not deal with. Of course, not all yakuza were like this.

They were also a necessary evil. However, this changed when the number of yakuza organizations began to increase, and they started to fight for power.

To pursue further profits, they have also expanded into drug trafficking and so on. Their numbers have been drastically reduced by the police. The state took the lead in thoroughly eliminating relations between the yakuza and the general public.

If you are identified as a yakuza, you cannot borrow money or have a bank account, and you are forced into a situation where it is difficult to make a living, and more and more of them are going out of business.

The decrease in the number of yakuza means that there are fewer scary people on the streets, which has led to situations where young people who get carried away misbehave, or foreign mafia do as they please in Japan.

The question remains as to whether the yakuza's aspect as a necessary evil was necessary for Japan's social structure.

Shinto, an ancient Japanese religion, is characterized by a lack of distinction between good and evil. There is no heaven or hell, only a land of the dead. Because of this, there is the belief that “what you think is right”.

And since there are two sides to everything, there was a culture in which Nezumi Kozo and the yakuza were seen as evil in one aspect and good in another, and only the good parts were extracted and conveyed in novels, plays, and films.

But this is also not possible now. Good and evil are judged according to the law in Japan today. Necessary evils and unnecessary goods are now a thing of the past.

Do you think necessary evils are necessary?

ABE KENGO


https://jp.japo.news/contents/culture/158208.html .tab=0

17/09/2024

Do Japanese women look cute because they are good at wearing make-up?

You may ask this question if you are a foreigner who has been to Japan.

I think that the majority of Japanese women have good make-up wearing techniques, and most are quite pretty.

So, what about the Japanese in older times? See the impartial opinions of foreigners who visited Japan before wearing make-up was common.

‘Narrative of The Expedition of an American Squadron to the China Seas and Japan, Washington’

This book was written in 1856. Within it, the differences between the common people and the nobility are described, starting with the common people.

The working class have tanned, brown skin, eyes that are not round but horizontal and deeply sunken. They have large heads and short necks, and their black hair is oiled and shiny. Their noses are short and round. The writer is insulting them, isn’t he?

On the other hand, the noble people are described as beautiful, with white skin and cheeks the color of carnation flowers.

Japan is a single ethnic group, so this difference described is probably due to differences in living environment, diet, and so on, considering that the common people and noble people have the same bloodline.

The basic idea is that the nobility were beautiful.

‘Nitto Sou Yuuka’

This was an article written by the messenger Kim In-gyeom, from Korea, who visited Japan for 11 months between 1763 and 1764.

In it he wrote:

“Japanese women are beautiful and the military officers from Korea discovered beautiful women among the onlookers at the parade… their heads going from left to right as they gazed upon them.”

They were parade spectators, so probably common people. Doesn't this therefore mean that there were many beautiful women among the common people?

Tooth blackening (O-haguro)

A culture that surprises men from other countries is the practice of “haguro”, meaning tooth blackening. Originally, it was the custom of the nobility to dye their teeth black, but it spread to the common people as well. It was especially popular among married women.

Haguro was evidence that a woman was spoken for. The teeth made them stand out less, making their faces appear softer, and women with shiny black teeth were thought to be beautiful.

However, I don't think this worked as a way to prevent cheating.

But when people from countries who didn’t have this culture saw those black teeth, it would have looked like a horror film, as it would for modern people too!

Wouldn't they have been more popular with foreigners if they didn't have the scary black teeth? Then again, perhaps it is not just a question of make-up that makes Japanese women beautiful, but something that underlies their looks.

It’s hard to know really, because you can't tell a woman walking down the street to remove her make-up and show her real face.

All over the world, make-up techniques are improving, and cosmetic surgery is very popular these days.

There is no longer any way to measure whether Japanese people are inherently beautiful, but if you are curious, I hope you will be able to get close enough to Japanese women so that you can see their true face

ABE KENGO

https://jp.japo.news/contents/beauty/158202.html .tab=0

GI-CONVENTION: Cơ hội kết nối với các nhà cung cấp hàng đầu Nhật BảnJAPO, ấn phẩm truyền thông Nhật Bản được đông đảo độ...
13/09/2024

GI-CONVENTION: Cơ hội kết nối với các nhà cung cấp hàng đầu Nhật Bản

JAPO, ấn phẩm truyền thông Nhật Bản được đông đảo độc giả Việt Nam yêu mến, sắp tổ chức một sự kiện kết nối đặc biệt với các doanh nghiệp hàng đầu từ Nhật Bản.

Nếu bạn đang tìm kiếm những sản phẩm mới, đối tác tiềm năng hoặc những ý tưởng kinh doanh đột phá, đừng bỏ lỡ cơ hội tham gia sự kiện lần này của chúng tôi!

Trong suốt sự kiện, chúng tôi sẽ trưng bày nhiều sản phẩm đa dạng từ Nhật Bản như mỹ phẩm, đồ da cao cấp, sản phẩm dành cho thú cưng và thiết bị tiết kiệm năng lượng.

Quý khách không chỉ có cơ hội trực tiếp trao đổi với các doanh nghiệp Nhật Bản, mà còn được khám phá những giải pháp đột phá cho nhu cầu của mình.

Đặc biệt, chúng tôi đã chuẩn bị nhiều phần quà hấp dẫn như vé giảm giá tại các cửa hàng nổi tiếng ở TP.HCM, dành tặng cho tất cả khách tham quan.

Sự kiện hoàn toàn miễn phí, và chúng tôi rất hân hạnh đón tiếp quý khách cùng bạn bè, người thân đến tham dự!
Rất mong được đón tiếp quý khách tại sự kiện.

Ngày tổ chức: Ngày 8 tháng 10 năm 2024 (13:00 - 18:00).
Ngày 9 tháng 10 năm 2024 (9:00 - 14:00)
Địa điểm: Khách sạn ROYAL HOTEL SAIGON
Địa chỉ: 133 Nguyễn Huệ, Bến Nghé, Quận 1, Hồ Chí Minh
Phí vào cửa: Miễn phí

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