<h2><SPAN name="I" id="I"></SPAN><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></SPAN>I</h2>
<h2>THE OLD ORDER CHANGETH</h2>
<p>There is one great basic fact which underlies all the questions
that are discussed on the political platform at the present moment.
That singular fact is that nothing is done in this country as it
was done twenty years ago.</p>
<p>We are in the presence of a new organization of society. Our
life has broken away from the past. The life of America is not the
life that it was twenty years ago; it is not the life that it was
ten years ago. We have changed our economic conditions, absolutely,
from top to bottom; and, with our economic society, the
organization of our life. The old political formulas do not fit the
present problems; they <SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4"></SPAN>read now
like documents taken out of a forgotten age. The older cries sound
as if they belonged to a past age which men have almost forgotten.
Things which used to be put into the party platforms of ten years
ago would sound antiquated if put into a platform now. We are
facing the necessity of fitting a new social organization, as we
did once fit the old organization, to the happiness and prosperity
of the great body of citizens; for we are conscious that the new
order of society has not been made to fit and provide the
convenience or prosperity of the average man. The life of the
nation has grown infinitely varied. It does not centre now upon
questions of governmental structure or of the distribution of
governmental powers. It centres upon questions of the very
structure and operation of society itself, of which government is
only the instrument. Our development has run so fast and so far
along the lines sketched in the earlier day of constitutional
definition, has so crossed and interlaced those lines, has piled
upon them such novel structures of trust and combination, has
elaborated within them <SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></SPAN>a life so
manifold, so full of forces which transcend the boundaries of the
country itself and fill the eyes of the world, that a new nation
seems to have been created which the old formulas do not fit or
afford a vital interpretation of.</p>
<p>We have come upon a very different age from any that preceded
us. We have come upon an age when we do not do business in the way
in which we used to do business,—when we do not carry on any
of the operations of manufacture, sale, transportation, or
communication as men used to carry them on. There is a sense in
which in our day the individual has been submerged. In most parts
of our country men work, not for themselves, not as partners in the
old way in which they used to work, but generally as
employees,—in a higher or lower grade,—of great
corporations. There was a time when corporations played a very
minor part in our business affairs, but now they play the chief
part, and most men are the servants of corporations.</p>
<p>You know what happens when you are the servant of a corporation.
You have in no instance access to the men who are really
deter<SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></SPAN>mining the policy of the
corporation. If the corporation is doing the things that it ought
not to do, you really have no voice in the matter and must obey the
orders, and you have oftentimes with deep mortification to
co-operate in the doing of things which you know are against the
public interest. Your individuality is swallowed up in the
individuality and purpose of a great organization.</p>
<p>It is true that, while most men are thus submerged in the
corporation, a few, a very few, are exalted to a power which as
individuals they could never have wielded. Through the great
organizations of which they are the heads, a few are enabled to
play a part unprecedented by anything in history in the control of
the business operations of the country and in the determination of
the happiness of great numbers of people.</p>
<p>Yesterday, and ever since history began, men were related to one
another as individuals. To be sure there were the family, the
Church, and the State, institutions which associated men in certain
wide circles of relationship. But in the ordinary concerns of life,
in the <SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></SPAN>ordinary work, in the daily
round, men dealt freely and directly with one another. To-day, the
everyday relationships of men are largely with great impersonal
concerns, with organizations, not with other individual men.</p>
<p>Now this is nothing short of a new social age, a new era of
human relationships, a new stage-setting for the drama of life.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>In this new age we find, for instance, that our laws with regard
to the relations of employer and employee are in many respects
wholly antiquated and impossible. They were framed for another age,
which nobody now living remembers, which is, indeed, so remote from
our life that it would be difficult for many of us to understand it
if it were described to us. The employer is now generally a
corporation or a huge company of some kind; the employee is one of
hundreds or of thousands brought together, not by individual
masters whom they know and with whom they have personal relations,
but by agents of one sort or another. Workingmen are marshaled in
great numbers <SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></SPAN>for the performance
of a multitude of particular tasks under a common discipline. They
generally use dangerous and powerful machinery, over whose repair
and renewal they have no control. New rules must be devised with
regard to their obligations and their rights, their obligations to
their employers and their responsibilities to one another. Rules
must be devised for their protection, for their compensation when
injured, for their support when disabled.</p>
<p>There is something very new and very big and very complex about
these new relations of capital and labor. A new economic society
has sprung up, and we must effect a new set of adjustments. We must
not pit power against weakness. The employer is generally, in our
day, as I have said, not an individual, but a powerful group; and
yet the workingman when dealing with his employer is still, under
our existing law, an individual.</p>
<p>Why is it that we have a labor question at all? It is for the
simple and very sufficient reason that the laboring man and the
employer are not intimate associates now as they used to <SPAN name=
"Page_9" id="Page_9"></SPAN>be in time past. Most of our laws were
formed in the age when employer and employees knew each other, knew
each other's characters, were associates with each other, dealt
with each other as man with man. That is no longer the case. You
not only do not come into personal contact with the men who have
the supreme command in those corporations, but it would be out of
the question for you to do it. Our modern corporations employ
thousands, and in some instances hundreds of thousands, of men. The
only persons whom you see or deal with are local superintendents or
local representatives of a vast organization, which is not like
anything that the workingmen of the time in which our laws were
framed knew anything about. A little group of workingmen, seeing
their employer every day, dealing with him in a personal way, is
one thing, and the modern body of labor engaged as employees of the
huge enterprises that spread all over the country, dealing with men
of whom they can form no personal conception, is another thing. A
very different thing. You never saw a corporation, any more than
you ever <SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></SPAN>saw a government. Many
a workingman to-day never saw the body of men who are conducting
the industry in which he is employed. And they never saw him. What
they know about him is written in ledgers and books and letters, in
the correspondence of the office, in the reports of the
superintendents. He is a long way off from them.</p>
<p>So what we have to discuss is, not wrongs which individuals
intentionally do,—I do not believe there are a great many of
those,—but the wrongs of a system. I want to record my
protest against any discussion of this matter which would seem to
indicate that there are bodies of our fellow-citizens who are
trying to grind us down and do us injustice. There are some men of
that sort. I don't know how they sleep o' nights, but there are men
of that kind. Thank God, they are not numerous. The truth is, we
are all caught in a great economic system which is heartless. The
modern corporation is not engaged in business as an individual.
When we deal with it, we deal with an impersonal element, an
immaterial piece <SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></SPAN>of society. A
modern corporation is a means of co-operation in the conduct of an
enterprise which is so big that no one man can conduct it, and
which the resources of no one man are sufficient to finance. A
company is formed; that company puts out a prospectus; the
promoters expect to raise a certain fund as capital stock. Well,
how are they going to raise it? They are going to raise it from the
public in general, some of whom will buy their stock. The moment
that begins, there is formed—what? A joint stock corporation.
Men begin to pool their earnings, little piles, big piles. A
certain number of men are elected by the stockholders to be
directors, and these directors elect a president. This president is
the head of the undertaking, and the directors are its
managers.</p>
<p>Now, do the workingmen employed by that stock corporation deal
with that president and those directors? Not at all. Does the
public deal with that president and that board of directors? It
does not. Can anybody bring them to account? It is next to
impossible to <SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></SPAN>do so. If you
undertake it you will find it a game of hide and seek, with the
objects of your search taking refuge now behind the tree of their
individual personality, now behind that of their corporate
irresponsibility.</p>
<p>And do our laws take note of this curious state of things? Do
they even attempt to distinguish between a man's act as a
corporation director and as an individual? They do not. Our laws
still deal with us on the basis of the old system. The law is still
living in the dead past which we have left behind. This is evident,
for instance, with regard to the matter of employers' liability for
workingmen's injuries. Suppose that a superintendent wants a
workman to use a certain piece of machinery which it is not safe
for him to use, and that the workman is injured by that piece of
machinery. Some of our courts have held that the superintendent is
a fellow-servant, or, as the law states it, a fellow-employee, and
that, therefore, the man cannot recover damages for his injury. The
superintendent who probably engaged the man is not his employer.
Who is his employer?<SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></SPAN> And whose
negligence could conceivably come in there? The board of directors
did not tell the employee to use that piece of machinery; and the
president of the corporation did not tell him to use that piece of
machinery. And so forth. Don't you see by that theory that a man
never can get redress for negligence on the part of the employer?
When I hear judges reason upon the analogy of the relationships
that used to exist between workmen and their employers a generation
ago, I wonder if they have not opened their eyes to the modern
world. You know, we have a right to expect that judges will have
their eyes open, even though the law which they administer hasn't
awakened.</p>
<p>Yet that is but a single small detail illustrative of the
difficulties we are in because we have not adjusted the law to the
facts of the new order.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Since I entered politics, I have chiefly had men's views
confided to me privately. Some of the biggest men in the United
States, in the field of commerce and manufacture, are afraid of
somebody, are afraid of something. They <SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></SPAN>know that there is a power somewhere so organized, so
subtle, so watchful, so interlocked, so complete, so pervasive,
that they had better not speak above their breath when they speak
in condemnation of it.</p>
<p>They know that America is not a place of which it can be said,
as it used to be, that a man may choose his own calling and pursue
it just as far as his abilities enable him to pursue it; because
to-day, if he enters certain fields, there are organizations which
will use means against him that will prevent his building up a
business which they do not want to have built up; organizations
that will see to it that the ground is cut from under him and the
markets shut against him. For if he begins to sell to certain
retail dealers, to any retail dealers, the monopoly will refuse to
sell to those dealers, and those dealers, afraid, will not buy the
new man's wares.</p>
<p>And this is the country which has lifted to the admiration of
the world its ideals of absolutely free opportunity, where no man
is supposed to be under any limitation except the limitations of
his character and of his mind; where there is <SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></SPAN>supposed to be no distinction of class, no
distinction of blood, no distinction of social status, but where
men win or lose on their merits.</p>
<p>I lay it very close to my own conscience as a public man whether
we can any longer stand at our doors and welcome all newcomers upon
those terms. American industry is not free, as once it was free;
American enterprise is not free; the man with only a little capital
is finding it harder to get into the field, more and more
impossible to compete with the big fellow. Why? Because the laws of
this country do not prevent the strong from crushing the weak. That
is the reason, and because the strong have crushed the weak the
strong dominate the industry and the economic life of this country.
No man can deny that the lines of endeavor have more and more
narrowed and stiffened; no man who knows anything about the
development of industry in this country can have failed to observe
that the larger kinds of credit are more and more difficult to
obtain, unless you obtain them upon the terms of uniting your
efforts with those who already control the <SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></SPAN>industries of the country; and nobody can fail to
observe that any man who tries to set himself up in competition
with any process of manufacture which has been taken under the
control of large combinations of capital will presently find
himself either squeezed out or obliged to sell and allow himself to
be absorbed.</p>
<p>There is a great deal that needs reconstruction in the United
States. I should like to take a census of the business men,—I
mean the rank and file of the business men,—as to whether
they think that business conditions in this country, or rather
whether the organization of business in this country, is
satisfactory or not. I know what they would say if they dared. If
they could vote secretly they would vote overwhelmingly that the
present organization of business was meant for the big fellows and
was not meant for the little fellows; that it was meant for those
who are at the top and was meant to exclude those who are at the
bottom; that it was meant to shut out beginners, to prevent new
entries in the race, to prevent the building up of competitive
enterprises that would <SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></SPAN>interfere
with the monopolies which the great trusts have built up.</p>
<p>What this country needs above everything else is a body of laws
which will look after the men who are on the make rather than the
men who are already made. Because the men who are already made are
not going to live indefinitely, and they are not always kind enough
to leave sons as able and as honest as they are.</p>
<p>The originative part of America, the part of America that makes
new enterprises, the part into which the ambitious and gifted
workingman makes his way up, the class that saves, that plans, that
organizes, that presently spreads its enterprises until they have a
national scope and character,—that middle class is being more
and more squeezed out by the processes which we have been taught to
call processes of prosperity. Its members are sharing prosperity,
no doubt; but what alarms me is that they are not
<i>originating</i> prosperity. No country can afford to have its
prosperity originated by a small controlling class. The treasury of
America does not lie in the brains of the small body <SPAN name=
"Page_18" id="Page_18"></SPAN>of men now in control of the great
enterprises that have been concentrated under the direction of a
very small number of persons. The treasury of America lies in those
ambitions, those energies, that cannot be restricted to a special
favored class. It depends upon the inventions of unknown men, upon
the originations of unknown men, upon the ambitions of unknown men.
Every country is renewed out of the ranks of the unknown, not out
of the ranks of those already famous and powerful and in
control.</p>
<p>There has come over the land that un-American set of conditions
which enables a small number of men who control the government to
get favors from the government; by those favors to exclude their
fellows from equal business opportunity; by those favors to extend
a network of control that will presently dominate every industry in
the country, and so make men forget the ancient time when America
lay in every hamlet, when America was to be seen in every fair
valley, when America displayed her great forces on the broad
prairies, ran her <SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></SPAN>fine fires of
enterprise up over the mountain-sides and down into the bowels of
the earth, and eager men were everywhere captains of industry, not
employees; not looking to a distant city to find out what they
might do, but looking about among their neighbors, finding credit
according to their character, not according to their connections,
finding credit in proportion to what was known to be in them and
behind them, not in proportion to the securities they held that
were approved where they were not known. In order to start an
enterprise now, you have to be authenticated, in a perfectly
impersonal way, not according to yourself, but according to what
you own that somebody else approves of your owning. You cannot
begin such an enterprise as those that have made America until you
are so authenticated, until you have succeeded in obtaining the
good-will of large allied capitalists. Is that freedom? That is
dependence, not freedom.</p>
<p>We used to think in the old-fashioned days when life was very
simple that all that govern<SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></SPAN>ment
had to do was to put on a policeman's uniform, and say, "Now don't
anybody hurt anybody else." We used to say that the ideal of
government was for every man to be left alone and not interfered
with, except when he interfered with somebody else; and that the
best government was the government that did as little governing as
possible. That was the idea that obtained in Jefferson's time. But
we are coming now to realize that life is so complicated that we
are not dealing with the old conditions, and that the law has to
step in and create new conditions under which we may live, the
conditions which will make it tolerable for us to live.</p>
<p>Let me illustrate what I mean: It used to be true in our cities
that every family occupied a separate house of its own, that every
family had its own little premises, that every family was separated
in its life from every other family. That is no longer the case in
our great cities. Families live in tenements, they live in flats,
they live on floors; they are piled layer upon layer in the great
tenement houses of our <SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></SPAN>crowded
districts, and not only are they piled layer upon layer, but they
are associated room by room, so that there is in every room,
sometimes, in our congested districts, a separate family. In some
foreign countries they have made much more progress than we in
handling these things. In the city of Glasgow, for example (Glasgow
is one of the model cities of the world), they have made up their
minds that the entries and the hallways of great tenements are
public streets. Therefore, the policeman goes up the stairway, and
patrols the corridors; the lighting department of the city sees to
it that the halls are abundantly lighted. The city does not deceive
itself into supposing that that great building is a unit from which
the police are to keep out and the civic authority to be excluded,
but it says: "These are public highways, and light is needed in
them, and control by the authority of the city."</p>
<p>I liken that to our great modern industrial enterprises. A
corporation is very like a large tenement house; it isn't the
premises of a single <SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></SPAN>commercial
family; it is just as much a public affair as a tenement house is a
network of public highways.</p>
<p>When you offer the securities of a great corporation to anybody
who wishes to purchase them, you must open that corporation to the
inspection of everybody who wants to purchase. There must, to
follow out the figure of the tenement house, be lights along the
corridors, there must be police patrolling the openings, there must
be inspection wherever it is known that men may be deceived with
regard to the contents of the premises. If we believe that fraud
lies in wait for us, we must have the means of determining whether
our suspicions are well founded or not. Similarly, the treatment of
labor by the great corporations is not what it was in Jefferson's
time. Whenever bodies of men employ bodies of men, it ceases to be
a private relationship. So that when courts hold that workingmen
cannot peaceably dissuade other workingmen from taking employment,
as was held in a notable case in New Jersey, they simply show that
their <SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></SPAN>minds and understandings
are lingering in an age which has passed away. This dealing of
great bodies of men with other bodies of men is a matter of public
scrutiny, and should be a matter of public regulation.</p>
<p>Similarly, it was no business of the law in the time of
Jefferson to come into my house and see how I kept house. But when
my house, when my so-called private property, became a great mine,
and men went along dark corridors amidst every kind of danger in
order to dig out of the bowels of the earth things necessary for
the industries of a whole nation, and when it came about that no
individual owned these mines, that they were owned by great stock
companies, then all the old analogies absolutely collapsed and it
became the right of the government to go down into these mines to
see whether human beings were properly treated in them or not; to
see whether accidents were properly safeguarded against; to see
whether modern economical methods of using these inestimable riches
of the earth were followed or were not followed. If somebody puts a
derrick im<SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></SPAN>properly secured on
top of a building or overtopping the street, then the government of
the city has the right to see that that derrick is so secured that
you and I can walk under it and not be afraid that the heavens are
going to fall on us. Likewise, in these great beehives where in
every corridor swarm men of flesh and blood, it is the privilege of
the government, whether of the State or of the United States, as
the case may be, to see that human life is protected, that human
lungs have something to breathe.</p>
<p>These, again, are merely illustrations of conditions. We are in
a new world, struggling under old laws. As we go inspecting our
lives to-day, surveying this new scene of centralized and complex
society, we shall find many more things out of joint.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>One of the most alarming phenomena of the time,—or rather
it would be alarming if the nation had not awakened to it and shown
its determination to control it,—one of the most significant
signs of the new social era is the degree to which government has
become as<SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></SPAN>sociated with business.
I speak, for the moment, of the control over the government
exercised by Big Business. Behind the whole subject, of course, is
the truth that, in the new order, government and business must be
associated closely. But that association is at present of a nature
absolutely intolerable; the precedence is wrong, the association is
upside down. Our government has been for the past few years under
the control of heads of great allied corporations with special
interests. It has not controlled these interests and assigned them
a proper place in the whole system of business; it has submitted
itself to their control. As a result, there have grown up vicious
systems and schemes of governmental favoritism (the most obvious
being the extravagant tariff), far-reaching in effect upon the
whole fabric of life, touching to his injury every inhabitant of
the land, laying unfair and impossible handicaps upon competitors,
imposing taxes in every direction, stifling everywhere the free
spirit of American enterprise.</p>
<p>Now this has come about naturally; as we <SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></SPAN>go on we shall see how very naturally. It is no use
denouncing anybody, or anything, except human nature. Nevertheless,
it is an intolerable thing that the government of the republic
should have got so far out of the hands of the people; should have
been captured by interests which are special and not general. In
the train of this capture follow the troops of scandals, wrongs,
indecencies, with which our politics swarm.</p>
<p>There are cities in America of whose government we are ashamed.
There are cities everywhere, in every part of the land, in which we
feel that, not the interests of the public, but the interests of
special privileges, of selfish men, are served; where contracts
take precedence over public interest. Not only in big cities is
this the case. Have you not noticed the growth of socialistic
sentiment in the smaller towns? Not many months ago I stopped at a
little town in Nebraska, and while my train lingered I met on the
platform a very engaging young fellow dressed in overalls who
introduced himself to me as the mayor of the town, and added
<SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></SPAN>that he was a Socialist. I said,
"What does that mean? Does that mean that this town is
socialistic?" "No, sir," he said; "I have not deceived myself; the
vote by which I was elected was about 20 per cent. socialistic and
80 per cent. protest." It was protest against the treachery to the
people of those who led both the other parties of that town.</p>
<p>All over the Union people are coming to feel that they have no
control over the course of affairs. I live in one of the greatest
States in the union, which was at one time in slavery. Until two
years ago we had witnessed with increasing concern the growth in
New Jersey of a spirit of almost cynical despair. Men said: "We
vote; we are offered the platform we want; we elect the men who
stand on that platform, and we get absolutely nothing." So they
began to ask: "What is the use of voting? We know that the machines
of both parties are subsidized by the same persons, and therefore
it is useless to turn in either direction."</p>
<p>This is not confined to some of the state governments and those
of some of the towns and cities.<SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></SPAN>
We know that something intervenes between the people of the United
States and the control of their own affairs at Washington. It is
not the people who have been ruling there of late.</p>
<p>Why are we in the presence, why are we at the threshold, of a
revolution? Because we are profoundly disturbed by the influences
which we see reigning in the determination of our public life and
our public policy. There was a time when America was blithe with
self-confidence. She boasted that she, and she alone, knew the
processes of popular government; but now she sees her sky overcast;
she sees that there are at work forces which she did not dream of
in her hopeful youth.</p>
<p>Don't you know that some man with eloquent tongue, without
conscience, who did not care for the nation, could put this whole
country into a flame? Don't you know that this country from one end
to the other believes that something is wrong? What an opportunity
it would be for some man without conscience to spring up and say:
"This is the way. Follow me!"—and lead in paths of
destruction!</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></SPAN>The old order
changeth—changeth under our very eyes, not quietly and
equably, but swiftly and with the noise and heat and tumult of
reconstruction.</p>
<p>I suppose that all struggle for law has been conscious, that
very little of it has been blind or merely instinctive. It is the
fashion to say, as if with superior knowledge of affairs and of
human weakness, that every age has been an age of transition, and
that no age is more full of change than another; yet in very few
ages of the world can the struggle for change have been so
widespread, so deliberate, or upon so great a scale as in this in
which we are taking part.</p>
<p>The transition we are witnessing is no equable transition of
growth and normal alteration; no silent, unconscious unfolding of
one age into another, its natural heir and successor. Society is
looking itself over, in our day, from top to bottom; is making
fresh and critical analysis of its very elements; is questioning
its oldest practices as freely as its newest, scrutinizing every
arrangement and motive of its life; and <SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></SPAN>it stands ready to attempt nothing less than a
radical reconstruction, which only frank and honest counsels and
the forces of generous co-operation can hold back from becoming a
revolution. We are in a temper to reconstruct economic society, as
we were once in a temper to reconstruct political society, and
political society may itself undergo a radical modification in the
process. I doubt if any age was ever more conscious of its task or
more unanimously desirous of radical and extended changes in its
economic and political practice.</p>
<p>We stand in the presence of a revolution,—not a bloody
revolution; America is not given to the spilling of
blood,—but a silent revolution, whereby America will insist
upon recovering in practice those ideals which she has always
professed, upon securing a government devoted to the general
interest and not to special interests.</p>
<p>We are upon the eve of a great reconstruction. It calls for
creative statesmanship as no age has done since that great age in
which we set up the government under which we live, that government
which was the admiration of the <SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></SPAN>world until it suffered wrongs to grow up under it
which have made many of our own compatriots question the freedom of
our institutions and preach revolution against them. I do not fear
revolution. I have unshaken faith in the power of America to keep
its self-possession. Revolution will come in peaceful guise, as it
came when we put aside the crude government of the Confederation
and created the great Federal Union which governs individuals, not
States, and which has been these hundred and thirty years our
vehicle of progress. Some radical changes we must make in our law
and practice. Some reconstructions we must push forward, which a
new age and new circumstances impose upon us. But we can do it all
in calm and sober fashion, like statesmen and patriots.</p>
<p>I do not speak of these things in apprehension, because all is
open and above-board. This is not a day in which great forces rally
in secret. The whole stupendous program must be publicly planned
and canvassed. Good temper, the wisdom that comes of sober counsel,
the energy of thoughtful and unselfish men, the <SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></SPAN>habit of co-operation and of compromise which has
been bred in us by long years of free government, in which reason
rather than passion has been made to prevail by the sheer virtue of
candid and universal debate, will enable us to win through to still
another great age without violence.</p>
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