Guest guest Posted September 24, 2010 Report Share Posted September 24, 2010 Dee, clearly, you don't understand what you're reading. E. coli was not found in the eggs in the article, and not a single word about it even occurs in the whole article that you think is about the " E. coli scare " ! And, the article poked the " ICk fctor " but provided no references for people who'd prefer data. You're right, all is certainly not good, Duncan > > Duncan, > > Perhaps this will convince you that the E. coli " scare? " is indeed linked to farming practices. > > http://www.johnrobbins.info/blog/how-egg-industry-greed-caused-the-salmonella-ou\ tbreak/ > > But then again, maybe not. Do keep in mind, however, that the E. coli in the eggs could have come from nowhere but the farm as there is no " butchery " involved and " handling " is unlikely as the E. coli was found inside the shells. In the case of meat, some contamination is due to handling and some to farm practices. It is not always easy in that case to tell. That is the reason that ALL methods of meat production - from animal feed and handling to the rest of production should be subjected to proper oversight and supervision - because it's > Not All Good, > Dee > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 24, 2010 Report Share Posted September 24, 2010 Duncan, You're kidding, right? I thought EVERYONE, including you, was aware that around 1,500 cases of salmonella poisoning was due to eating eggs produced on at least 2 farms: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38866401/ quote: " Sherri McGarry of the FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition said the salmonella found at County Egg matches the fingerprint of the salmonella found in many of those who were sickened. She said the tests indicate that contaminated feed is a source of the outbreak but possibly not the only source. " The reason I specifically referenced the article you again claim I " don't understand " was to counter your claim that the farming practices are not at fault. Forgive me but I didn't realize you were not aware of the egg contamination. Dee > > > > Duncan, > > > > Perhaps this will convince you that the E. coli " scare? " is indeed linked to farming practices. > > > > http://www.johnrobbins.info/blog/how-egg-industry-greed-caused-the-salmonella-ou\ tbreak/ > > > > But then again, maybe not. Do keep in mind, however, that the E. coli in the eggs could have come from nowhere but the farm as there is no " butchery " involved and " handling " is unlikely as the E. coli was found inside the shells. In the case of meat, some contamination is due to handling and some to farm practices. It is not always easy in that case to tell. That is the reason that ALL methods of meat production - from animal feed and handling to the rest of production should be subjected to proper oversight and supervision - because it's > > Not All Good, > > Dee > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 24, 2010 Report Share Posted September 24, 2010 Dee, it's difficult to make a point to you because you keep confusing e. coli in tainted beef with salmonella in chicken eggs almost every time you reply. When we discussed the E. coli scare I pointed out that farming practices do not cause the beef to be inoculated with E. coli. You fetched up an unrelated topic, the eggs, and said E. coli was in them too, in your last couple of posts. Did you know there is a difference and that E. coli is an inoculant in meat and Salmonella an endemic disease in chickens? Yup, I'm well aware that the USA-bred chickens have not had salmonella-free status for about 40 years; I had already posted that observation. all good, Duncan > > Duncan, > > You're kidding, right? I thought EVERYONE, including you, was aware that around 1,500 cases of salmonella poisoning was due to eating eggs produced on at least 2 farms: > http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38866401/ > quote: " Sherri McGarry of the FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition said the salmonella found at County Egg matches the fingerprint of the salmonella found in many of those who were sickened. She said the tests indicate that contaminated feed is a source of the outbreak but possibly not the only source. " > > The reason I specifically referenced the article you again claim I " don't understand " was to counter your claim that the farming practices are not at fault. Forgive me but I didn't realize you were not aware of the egg contamination. > > Dee > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 24, 2010 Report Share Posted September 24, 2010 Duncan, Yes there IS a difference but does it really matter? They are both forms of bacteria that infect farm animals. In the case of eggs it is primarily due to farming practices and in the case of meat it can be due in some cases to farm practices (such as coming in contact with beef feces used as fertilizer or overuse of hormones (probably both) and sometimes in the production of the final product. But you are dead wrong that farming practices are not a problem with beef as there is plenty of evidence to the contrary. And contrary to your charges, I misunderstood nothing - including the prior articles you keep mentioning. The bottom line is that there is a problem with both eggs and meat and the people who are affected would hardly consider it a " scare " . And since you claim to be interested in scientific evidence you can chew on this for awhile: http://tinyurl.com/3a9okla And be sure to read it in its' entirety so that YOU don't misunderstand anything. Not All Good, Dee > > > > Duncan, > > > > You're kidding, right? I thought EVERYONE, including you, was aware that around 1,500 cases of salmonella poisoning was due to eating eggs produced on at least 2 farms: > > http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38866401/ > > quote: " Sherri McGarry of the FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition said the salmonella found at County Egg matches the fingerprint of the salmonella found in many of those who were sickened. She said the tests indicate that contaminated feed is a source of the outbreak but possibly not the only source. " > > > > The reason I specifically referenced the article you again claim I " don't understand " was to counter your claim that the farming practices are not at fault. Forgive me but I didn't realize you were not aware of the egg contamination. > > > > Dee > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2010 Report Share Posted September 25, 2010 Dee, research points to WILD birds as being a main vector for salmonella on farms, including cross contamination of farms, and goes on to suggest a need for controlling wildlife as well. <http://www.berrymaninstitute.org/journal/spring2007/Pedersen.pdf> Not all of the salmonella readily transmits to humans; some more rarely than others. This study points it out: " We present here Salmonella Dublin Bacteraemia in an elderly patient, with all the clinical details, due to the rarity of its occurrence. " <http://www.ijmm.org/article.asp?issn=0255-0857;year=2009;volume=27;issue=4;spag\ e=365;epage=367;aulast=Dias> E. coli and salmonella are everywhere, literally dozens of strains; I'm thinking that instead of continuing to lace feed with antibiotics, which produces resistant strains, attending to the terrain may be the better option. For example butyric acid that is used today in humans to help correct bowel dysbiosis and " cure " Crohn's disease, also works on animals with salmonella. See: " Preventing Salmonella infections by rationally designed feed... " <http://www.google.com/search?client=aff-cs-worldbrowser & forid=1 & ie=utf-8 & oe=UTF\ -8 & q=butyric+OR+butyrate+salmonella> Because butyric acid is created by a healthy bowel ecology, perhaps these animals are getting sick due to an unhealthy bowel ecology, which can be improved with feed additives that foster probiotic growth. Not so much a farming practice but a feed practice that adjusts internal susceptability, just like we do with the prebiotic Inulin. Further on terrain, Transfer Factor confers immunity to whatever germ or virus the host was immune to. Just think of the miracle of being immune to many of those diseases with a single oral therapy as opposed to dozens of vaccinations. Research has shown cattle are immune so usually do NOT get sick from it or shed it through their feces or milk even after researchers collapse their immune response; it is encapsulated by local nodules until the cow's immune system deals with it. The cattle's transfer factors will allow us to become similarly immune. Similarly, chicken eggs also contain transfer factors. This will probably not completely prevent a bout of enteritis, but it will prevent a tissue infection, and again, enteritis risk is minimised by a good bowel culture in both man and beast. Looks like we may have a partial answer, in feeding the animals and ourselves better. Seems with the wild bird vector concern that the poultry manure should be sterilised before it's used for amendment on the fields. Once pathogen-free it can be used as feed or spread safely as fertiliser. Seems the reseach points to the necessity of both, plus incinerating it, just to get rid of all the waste. In the Vancouver area for example the poultry farms are producing about three times what can be spread on the fields and they're looking for ways to get rid of it before we're in it up to our eyeballs. Most likely the issue has also been raised for cow manure. all good, Duncan > > Duncan, > > Yes there IS a difference but does it really matter? They are both forms of bacteria that infect farm animals. In the case of eggs it is primarily due to farming practices and in the case of meat it can be due in some cases to farm practices (such as coming in contact with beef feces used as fertilizer or overuse of hormones (probably both) and sometimes in the production of the final product. But you are dead wrong that farming practices are not a problem with beef as there is plenty of evidence to the contrary. And contrary to your charges, I misunderstood nothing - including the prior articles you keep mentioning. The bottom line is that there is a problem with both eggs and meat and the people who are affected would hardly consider it a " scare " . And since you claim to be interested in scientific evidence you can chew on this for awhile: http://tinyurl.com/3a9okla > And be sure to read it in its' entirety so that YOU don't misunderstand anything. > Not All Good, > Dee > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2010 Report Share Posted September 25, 2010 If you have seen 'food inc' and 'Dirt' ? we need to look at the fact that this stuff is all done way with normal care and feeding of fam amimals, instead of drugs and gmo'ing everything just feed these animals what they need--if they take the cattle off the grains 1 week b\4 buthchering there would not be any need for fear of comusming e-coli. Chickens need to be running free eating bug worms and seeds. and i don't mean keep them in a cage and move every few hours that is rediculus.  We should be buying all we eat from the land in our neighborhoods local grown then if someone gets sick due to poor practices that conflick with nature we can take our miney and go some where else. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2010 Report Share Posted September 25, 2010 Duncan, Gee, and here I thought you wanted to move on :-) But I guess you just had to have the last word so consider it had. Too bad it took so long for you to admit, though, that there is more to the salmonella in beef issue than the " ick factor " . I also find it interesting that you waited until now to do any real research on the issue until Alobar mentioned antibiotics and I provided the info on that. But I'll check yours out as well. Dee > > > > Duncan, > > > > Yes there IS a difference but does it really matter? They are both forms of bacteria that infect farm animals. In the case of eggs it is primarily due to farming practices and in the case of meat it can be due in some cases to farm practices (such as coming in contact with beef feces used as fertilizer or overuse of hormones (probably both) and sometimes in the production of the final product. But you are dead wrong that farming practices are not a problem with beef as there is plenty of evidence to the contrary. And contrary to your charges, I misunderstood nothing - including the prior articles you keep mentioning. The bottom line is that there is a problem with both eggs and meat and the people who are affected would hardly consider it a " scare " . And since you claim to be interested in scientific evidence you can chew on this for awhile: http://tinyurl.com/3a9okla > > And be sure to read it in its' entirety so that YOU don't misunderstand anything. > > Not All Good, > > Dee > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2010 Report Share Posted September 25, 2010 I believe we also have to be our brother's keeper and look out for more than just ourselves Evie, which means that we have to ensure that all who profit from farming practices are doing so in a way that promotes health rather than disease. It's the very least we can do. And I'm very glad you watched 'Food Inc.' I hope that everyone does. Best, Dee > > If you have seen 'food inc' and 'Dirt' ? we need to look at the fact that this stuff is all done way with normal care and feeding of fam amimals, instead of drugs and gmo'ing everything just feed these animals what they need--if they take the cattle off the grains 1 week b\4 buthchering there would not be any need for fear of comusming e-coli. Chickens need to be running free eating bug worms and seeds. and i don't mean keep them in a cage and move every few hours that is rediculus.  We should be buying all we eat from the land in our neighborhoods local grown then if someone gets sick due to poor practices that conflick with nature we can take our miney and go some where else. > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2010 Report Share Posted September 25, 2010 I totally agree but you cant push a rope. I try to share stuff with my circle of friends and family.  I was talking to my mentor in all things clean and nutritous and she was telling me that farmers they have been working with they just found out that they continue to use monsanto products for their crops and such sad but true. Thanks From: Dolores <dgk@...> Subject: Re: the sad truth...was " Phude Fascists " Coconut Oil Date: Saturday, September 25, 2010, 1:29 PM  I believe we also have to be our brother's keeper and look out for more than just ourselves Evie, which means that we have to ensure that all who profit from farming practices are doing so in a way that promotes health rather than disease. It's the very least we can do. And I'm very glad you watched 'Food Inc.' I hope that everyone does. Best, Dee > > If you have seen 'food inc' and 'Dirt' ? we need to look at the fact that this stuff is all done way with normal care and feeding of fam amimals, instead of drugs and gmo'ing everything just feed these animals what they need--if they take the cattle off the grains 1 week b\4 buthchering there would not be any need for fear of comusming e-coli. Chickens need to be running free eating bug worms and seeds. and i don't mean keep them in a cage and move every few hours that is rediculus.  We should be buying all we eat from the land in our neighborhoods local grown then if someone gets sick due to poor practices that conflick with nature we can take our miney and go some where else. > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2010 Report Share Posted September 25, 2010 Hi Evie, Yes, Monsonto has become a monster that's very hard to control. Dr. Mercola has one of the best exposes on his website here: http://tinyurl.com/23mh64b But perhaps if we all pull the rope in the other direction we can make some headway. There is a good article in the Washington Post relating how, >quote: " During the Bush administration, the Justice Department did not file a single case under antimonopoly laws regulating a dominant firm. But that stretch seems unlikely to continue. This year, the Obama Justice Department tossed out the antitrust guidelines of its predecessor because they advocated " extreme hesitancy in the face of potential abuses by monopoly firms. " We must change course, " Varney, the Obama administration's chief antitrust enforcer, said at the time.>end quote http://tinyurl.com/yfx452y Best, Dee > > > > If you have seen 'food inc' and 'Dirt' ? we need to look at the fact that this stuff is all done way with normal care and feeding of fam amimals, instead of drugs and gmo'ing everything just feed these animals what they need--if they take the cattle off the grains 1 week b\4 buthchering there would not be any need for fear of comusming e-coli. Chickens need to be running free eating bug worms and seeds. and i don't mean keep them in a cage and move every few hours that is rediculus.  We should be buying all we eat from the land in our neighborhoods local grown then if someone gets sick due to poor practices that conflick with nature we can take our miney and go some where else. > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2010 Report Share Posted September 25, 2010 Duncan, If wild birds are easily contaminated with Salmonella, and farmers spread raw chicken waste on fields, us humans are making for bigger and bigger problems in our world, aren't we. Alobar On Sat, Sep 25, 2010 at 11:55 AM, Duncan Crow <duncancrow@...> wrote: > > Dee, research points to WILD birds as being a main vector for salmonella on farms, including cross contamination of farms, and goes on to suggest a need for controlling wildlife as well. > <http://www.berrymaninstitute.org/journal/spring2007/Pedersen.pdf> > > Not all of the salmonella readily transmits to humans; some more rarely than others. This study points it out: " We present here Salmonella Dublin Bacteraemia in an elderly patient, with all the clinical details, due to the rarity of its occurrence. " > <http://www.ijmm.org/article.asp?issn=0255-0857;year=2009;volume=27;issue=4;spag\ e=365;epage=367;aulast=Dias> > > E. coli and salmonella are everywhere, literally dozens of strains; I'm thinking that instead of continuing to lace feed with antibiotics, which produces resistant strains, attending to the terrain may be the better option. For example butyric acid that is used today in humans to help correct bowel dysbiosis and " cure " Crohn's disease, also works on animals with salmonella. See: > " Preventing Salmonella infections by rationally designed feed... " > <http://www.google.com/search?client=aff-cs-worldbrowser & forid=1 & ie=utf-8 & oe=UTF\ -8 & q=butyric+OR+butyrate+salmonella> > > Because butyric acid is created by a healthy bowel ecology, perhaps these animals are getting sick due to an unhealthy bowel ecology, which can be improved with feed additives that foster probiotic growth. Not so much a farming practice but a feed practice that adjusts internal susceptability, just like we do with the prebiotic Inulin. > > Further on terrain, Transfer Factor confers immunity to whatever germ or virus the host was immune to. Just think of the miracle of being immune to many of those diseases with a single oral therapy as opposed to dozens of vaccinations. > > Research has shown cattle are immune so usually do NOT get sick from it or shed it through their feces or milk even after researchers collapse their immune response; it is encapsulated by local nodules until the cow's immune system deals with it. The cattle's transfer factors will allow us to become similarly immune. Similarly, chicken eggs also contain transfer factors. This will probably not completely prevent a bout of enteritis, but it will prevent a tissue infection, and again, enteritis risk is minimised by a good bowel culture in both man and beast. > > Looks like we may have a partial answer, in feeding the animals and ourselves better. > > Seems with the wild bird vector concern that the poultry manure should be sterilised before it's used for amendment on the fields. Once pathogen-free it can be used as feed or spread safely as fertiliser. Seems the reseach points to the necessity of both, plus incinerating it, just to get rid of all the waste. In the Vancouver area for example the poultry farms are producing about three times what can be spread on the fields and they're looking for ways to get rid of it before we're in it up to our eyeballs. Most likely the issue has also been raised for cow manure. > > all good, > > Duncan > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 26, 2010 Report Share Posted September 26, 2010 I agree with careful shopping, and the the organic movement is strong here. Weed and Feed and other herbicides and pesticides are banned in our city, and city council uses only free run or free range eggs in their official events, I forget which. We buy organic at the farmers markets too but US regulations prohibit the labeling of food as organic so none of our US-bought organic produce can claim that it is so it can't compete at the supermarkets. Not sure about that cow statement Evie; my understanding is that cows contain a lot of E. coli regardless of whether they eat some grain or not; it's the main microbe in their gut. Duncan > > If you have seen 'food inc' and 'Dirt' ? we need to look at the fact that this stuff is all done way with normal care and feeding of fam amimals, instead of drugs and gmo'ing everything just feed these animals what they need--if they take the cattle off the grains 1 week b\4 buthchering there would not be any need for fear of comusming e-coli. Chickens need to be running free eating bug worms and seeds. and i don't mean keep them in a cage and move every few hours that is rediculus.  We should be buying all we eat from the land in our neighborhoods local grown then if someone gets sick due to poor practices that conflick with nature we can take our miney and go some where else. > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 5, 2010 Report Share Posted October 5, 2010 Hi Alobar; I've been reading industry documents that mention wild birds have been the disease vector for about a dozen strains of salmonella in the last few decades. Chicken waste is known to burn the plants unless it is rotted. In our particular area the waste is rotted for almost a year before they spread it; this also renders the waste very low in pathogens. The practise has not increased salmonella in Canada, which is still considered salmonella-free. I'd want to know how many farms in the USA are putting raw waste on the fields and whether this affects the endemic salmonella. I note that most of the farms seem to be selling processed pelletized waste, which is considered to be pathogen-free. all good, Duncan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 5, 2010 Report Share Posted October 5, 2010 Hi Duncan, Back 45 years ago when I studied Agriculture in college, raw poultry waste was blended with cow manure and spread on fields here in the US. Alobar On Tue, Oct 5, 2010 at 12:15 PM, Duncan Crow <duncancrow@...> wrote: > Hi Alobar; I've been reading industry documents that mention wild birds > have been the disease vector for about a dozen strains of salmonella in the > last few decades. > > Chicken waste is known to burn the plants unless it is rotted. In our > particular area the waste is rotted for almost a year before they spread it; > this also renders the waste very low in pathogens. The practise has not > increased salmonella in Canada, which is still considered salmonella-free. > > I'd want to know how many farms in the USA are putting raw waste on the > fields and whether this affects the endemic salmonella. I note that most of > the farms seem to be selling processed pelletized waste, which is considered > to be pathogen-free. > > all good, > > Duncan > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 6, 2010 Report Share Posted October 6, 2010 *Alobar: Yes, but you have to go lightly on the poultry manure. It quickly upsets the pH balance of the soil. We have lots of it here in Delaware (once the chicken capital of the US), but we end up shipping to places where the soil can take it. Jim* On 10/5/2010 10:27 PM, Alobar wrote: > > Hi Duncan, > > Back 45 years ago when I studied Agriculture in college, raw poultry waste > was blended with cow manure and spread on fields here in the US. > > Alobar > > On Tue, Oct 5, 2010 at 12:15 PM, Duncan Crow <duncancrow@... > <mailto:duncancrow%40>> wrote: > > > Hi Alobar; I've been reading industry documents that mention wild birds > > have been the disease vector for about a dozen strains of salmonella > in the > > last few decades. > > > > Chicken waste is known to burn the plants unless it is rotted. In our > > particular area the waste is rotted for almost a year before they > spread it; > > this also renders the waste very low in pathogens. The practise has not > > increased salmonella in Canada, which is still considered > salmonella-free. > > > > I'd want to know how many farms in the USA are putting raw waste on the > > fields and whether this affects the endemic salmonella. I note that > most of > > the farms seem to be selling processed pelletized waste, which is > considered > > to be pathogen-free. > > > > all good, > > > > Duncan > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 6, 2010 Report Share Posted October 6, 2010 Alobar, since you studied agriculture, is it true that horse manure is the best fertilizer, won't burn plants? > > > Hi Alobar; I've been reading industry documents that mention wild birds > > have been the disease vector for about a dozen strains of salmonella in the > > last few decades. > > > > Chicken waste is known to burn the plants unless it is rotted. In our > > particular area the waste is rotted for almost a year before they spread it; > > this also renders the waste very low in pathogens. The practise has not > > increased salmonella in Canada, which is still considered salmonella-free. > > > > I'd want to know how many farms in the USA are putting raw waste on the > > fields and whether this affects the endemic salmonella. I note that most of > > the farms seem to be selling processed pelletized waste, which is considered > > to be pathogen-free. > > > > all good, > > > > Duncan > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 6, 2010 Report Share Posted October 6, 2010 Not much was mentioned about horse manure in college, but my family had a big garden, and I had a horse. We had great big fat juicy crops with lots of flavor. Alobar On Wed, Oct 6, 2010 at 12:12 PM, <@...> wrote: > Alobar, > > since you studied agriculture, is it true that horse manure is the best fertilizer, won't burn plants? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 6, 2010 Report Share Posted October 6, 2010 Hi Jim, Greetings from the Philippines ! What do you mean chicken manure upsets the soil ? Here in the Philippines, chicken manure when dried is either applied singly directly to the soil as an organic fertilizer and soil conditioner or used a a component of blended commercial fertilizers for agricultural and horticultural crops/plants. We have analyzed dried chicken manures from several poultry farms in different regions in the country. Our findings (average mineral nutrient content are: macro and secondary nutrients (in %) : 2.1% N, 3.35% P205, 3.10% K20, 5.34% CaO, 1.95% MgO, 0.09% S, 0.65% Cl, 1.17% Na; MIcronutrients (in mg/kg or ppm): 45 ppm B, 580 ppm Zn; 27,620 ppm Fe (2.70% Fe), 1,710 ppm Mn and 116 ppm Cu. Clearly, not only that the dried or slightly decomposed chicken manure is a supplementary source of plant/crop nutrients, but provides a substantial amounts of calcium (Ca), and plant micronutrients boron (, zinc (Zn), manganese (Mn); and remarkable high levels of micronutrient iron (Fe) at 2.70 %. Moreover, due to this richness of chicken manue in many plant nutrients, the generally good response of most crops in the Philippines and in many countries as shown in many technical reports, globally is not surprising. Hoping, this information is knowledge and make sense. Cheers, Sev Magat > > > Hi Alobar; I've been reading industry documents that mention wild birds > > have been the disease vector for about a dozen strains of salmonella > in the > > last few decades. > > > > Chicken waste is known to burn the plants unless it is rotted. In our > > particular area the waste is rotted for almost a year before they > spread it; > > this also renders the waste very low in pathogens. The practise has not > > increased salmonella in Canada, which is still considered > salmonella-free. > > > > I'd want to know how many farms in the USA are putting raw waste on the > > fields and whether this affects the endemic salmonella. I note that > most of > > the farms seem to be selling processed pelletized waste, which is > considered > > to be pathogen-free. > > > > all good, > > > > Duncan > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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