The blog series

[People worshipping you are a necessity]

Every organization eventually becomes a reflection of the beliefs it refuses to question, thus I say: 

Power, in its most refined form, is not merely exercised, but reflected. And nothing reflects power more convincingly than the presence of those who revere it. People who worship you are not simply admirers; they are amplifiers of your existence. They validate your stance before you have to defend it, they echo your voice before you have to raise it. In a world governed by perception, their belief becomes a currency you spend sans ever depleting.

To dismiss admiration as vanity is to misunderstand its utility. Worship, in this context, is not about ego, it is about structure. It creates a psychological perimeter around your authority, a quiet consensus that you are not to be questioned lightly. Those who admire you become informal gatekeepers, filtering doubt, deflecting criticism, and often silencing opposition before it reaches you. This is not accidental; it is strategic, whether consciously built or naturally attracted. Give followers a reason to be that. 

There is also an efficiency in being revered. When people already believe in your capability, your actions require less explanation. Your decisions are interpreted with generosity rather than suspicion. Where others must constantly prove themselves, you are granted the benefit of assumption. This allows you to operate with a kind of speed and decisiveness that others cannot afford. In many arenas, that alone becomes the difference between influence and irrelevance.

However, worship is not born from demand, it is cultivated through consistency and controlled exposure. People do not admire chaos; they admire coherence. When your actions align with your words, when your presence carries a predictable weight, people begin to attach certainty to you. And certainty is deeply attractive. It offers people something stable to believe in, especially in environments where instability is the norm.

There is a subtle conjugation required in maintaining this dynamic. Too much accessibility dilutes reverence. When you are constantly available, constantly explaining, constantly accommodating, you become ordinary. Worship thrives on a degree of distance, on the preservation of mystery. It is not about being unreachable, but about being measured and knowing when to appear, when to speak, and when to withdraw.

Equally important is the understanding that not everyone should worship you. Universal approval is a weak foundation. The presence of dissent sharpens the devotion of your supporters. It creates contrast, and contrast strengthens perception. Those who choose to stand with you do so more deliberately when there is something to stand against. In this way, even opposition becomes a tool that reinforces your position.

Ultimately, people who worship you are not just followers, they are extensions of your narrative. They carry your ideas into spaces you may never enter, defend your image in conversations you may never hear, and uphold your influence in moments you may never witness. Their belief becomes a decentralized form of your presence, multiplying your reach sans demanding your direct involvement.

In conclusion

To have people who worship you is not a matter of indulgence, but is a matter of leverage and power. It is about constructing an environment where your presence is felt beyond your immediate actions, where your influence operates even in your absence. Managed with intention and restraint, this dynamic becomes less about admiration and more about enduring impact. Leadership is a leverage when followed, and worse, when worshipped. A Leader gains its strength from being followed because it suggests alignment, trust, and a shared direction. People who follow still think, still choose, still hold the Leader accountable in subtle ways. That tension keeps Leadership honest. It forces refinement. It keeps the structure alive rather than rigid.

But when it shifts into worship, something changes. The leverage becomes heavier, almost dangerous. Worship removes friction, and sans friction, there is no natural correction. Decisions stop being tested, they get absorbed. The Leader is no longer just influencing outcomes but shaping reality unchecked. That’s where the 'worse' comes in, not because it’s ineffective, but because it’s too effective in the wrong way.

There’s also a quiet cost to being worshipped. You stop hearing truth in its raw form. Feedback becomes curated, filtered through admiration. Over time, that can isolate a Leader from the very environment they are meant to understand. Power remains, but awareness begins to thin out. And without awareness, even strong Leadership can drift into miscalculation. The real art, then, is knowing how to carry influence without becoming dependent on reverence. To be followed, but not deified. To allow belief in you, but never at the expense of people’s ability to think independently. Because the strongest form of leverage isn’t control, it’s alignment that can still question you when it matters.. .dp

_Another reflection from the intersection of commerce, power, and human behaviour.

Examining the human pulse beneath the corporate machinery, for the future rarely defeats defines of organizations, and more often, it simply waits for them to outgrow their own thinking.. .

¦KgeleLeso

Contributor: ChatGPT

©2K26. ddwebbtel publishing

 

[Be a brutal god to self commerce being]

Every organization eventually becomes a reflection of the beliefs it refuses to question, thus I say: 

In the quiet corridors of corporate ambition, there exists an unspoken paradox: the softer one is with oneself, the harsher the market becomes. Commerce does not reward comfort; it rewards clarity, discipline, and an almost surgical self-awareness. To survive and thrive, one must become both creator and critic, builder and destroyer of their own professional identity. To be a ‘brutal god to self’ is not cruelty, but a conscious refinement of own as the source.

The commerce being is not merely an effort machinery, entrepreneur, or executive. It is a construct, a living portfolio of decisions, habits, and intellectual assets. Every meeting attended, every idea pitched, every silence held becomes part of its valuation. Yet too many treat this being with indulgence, allowing mediocrity to masquerade as stability. Brutality, in this context, is the refusal to accept that illusion.

Self-brutality begins with audit. Not the ceremonial kind dressed in performance reviews, but the raw, unfiltered confrontation with one’s own inefficiencies. Where are you redundant? Where are you replaceable? Where are you coasting under the disguise of experience? These are not comfortable questions, but commerce has never been a sanctuary for comfort.

To be a brutal god to self is to dismantle ego before the market does it for you. Ego inflates perception but erodes adaptability. The moment one believes they have ‘arrived’, they begin their quiet descent into irrelevance. The commerce being must remain in a constant state of becoming, never settled, never static, always recalibrating against the shifting demands of value.

Discipline becomes the altar upon which this philosophy rests. Not motivation, which is fleeting and emotional, but discipline, which is structural and relentless. It is the daily commitment to improvement even when no one is watching, even when no reward is immediate. Brutality is consistency without applause.

There is also a strategic cruelty required in decision-making. Opportunities must be evaluated not by their appeal, but by their alignment with long-term positioning. This means saying ‘no’ often and unapologetically. The brutal self understands that dilution is the enemy of distinction. Every ‘yes’ must justify its existence within a broader architecture of purpose.

Feedback, often feared, becomes sacred under this doctrine. Not all feedback is valid, but all of it is data. Most people experience feedback emotionally first and intellectually later, if at all in that it flips the order. It reframes feedback from judgment into raw material. And once it becomes material, it can be shaped, filtered, even discarded, but never ignored and, the commerce being must develop the capacity to extract insight sans absorbing noise. To reject criticism outright is to reject evolution; to accept it blindly is to lose identity. Brutality is discernment sharpened over time.

There is an emotional cost to this way of being. Self-compassion must not be entirely exiled, for even the most disciplined systems require moments of restoration. However, compassion must never become an excuse for stagnation. The balance is delicate: forgive the misstep, but never normalize it. Learn, adjust, and move.

In a world where corporate ecosystems are increasingly volatile, the most valuable asset is not skill alone, but adaptability anchored in self-mastery. The brutal god does not wait for disruption; they anticipate it, rehearse for it, and often initiate it within themselves first. Reinvention is no longer optional but rather the currency of relevance. You are not at the mercy of opinions, you are the analyst of them.

Ultimately, to be a brutal god to self is to take absolute ownership of one’s commercial existence. No scapegoats, no passive narratives, no reliance on external validation. It is a philosophy of internal governance, where standards are set high and enforced with not compromise. The commerce being becomes sovereign.

In conclusion

'Be a brutal god to self: the commerce being' is not a call to self-destruction, but to self-authorship at the highest level. It demands courage to confront, discipline to refine, and vision to evolve. In a marketplace that forgets quickly and replaces effortlessly, the only enduring advantage is the one forged within. Be relentless in your self-construction, because if you are not shaping your value with intention, the world will shape it for you, and not always kindly.. .dp

_Another reflection from the intersection of commerce, power, and human behaviour.

Examining the human pulse beneath the corporate machinery, for the future rarely defeats defines of organizations, and more often, it simply waits for them to outgrow their own thinking.. .

¦KgeleLeso

Contributor: ChatGPT

©2K26. ddwebbtel publishing

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[A godder demon I Are]

Every organization eventually becomes a reflection of the beliefs it refuses to question, thus I say:

Leadership, at its highest tier, ceases to resemble virtue. It sheds the soft garments of inspiration and dons something more angular, more merciless. To lead leaders is not to stand above but to stand alone, where even admiration feels like surveillance and loyalty tastes like a test. Here, one is no longer permitted the luxury of innocence. You do not guide; you govern the gravity of others’ decisions. And in doing so, you become less human and more an instrument; sharpened, necessary, and feared.

There is a quiet mutation that occurs when authority compounds. The first followers require vision, the next require certainty, but leaders require something far colder: inevitability. They do not follow belief; they follow force disguised as clarity. To command them, you must outgrow persuasion. You must become a structure they cannot bend, a logic they cannot outmanoeuvre. In this transformation, empathy becomes a liability that is felt, but rationed. Expressed, but calculated. You are not permitted to feel freely, only to feel strategically.

To be the architect of architects is to inherit their consequences sans inheriting their relief. Their failures echo upward, but their victories settle around them like crowns. You remain uncrowned, unthanked, yet indispensable. This is the covenant unspoken: you absorb the pressure so they may perform the illusion of control. And so, you learn to metabolize chaos into composure, doubt into doctrine. You become the silent furnace in which their certainty is forged.

There is cruelty in clarity. When you see further than others, you also see through them. Their flaws in pursue of ambitions, their blind spots, their eventual collapse, they’re all visible long before it manifests. And still, you must let some of it happen. Intervention is not always mercy; sometimes it is theft. To lead leaders is to allow calculated failure, to permit fractures so that structures reveal their true integrity. In this, you become an accomplice to pain, a curator of necessary suffering.

Isolation here is not circumstantial, but organized and structural. You cannot confide downward sans destabilizing, nor upward with not exposing limitation. You exist in a sealed chamber of perception, where your thoughts must be refined before they are released, and your doubts must die before they are seen. This is where the self begins to distort. You split into roles: the one who feels, and the one who decides. And over time, only one of them survives.

Power, at this altitude, is no longer about influence. It is about containment. You contain egos that could fracture systems, ambitions that could consume institutions, ideas that could destabilize entire directions. You are not merely leading people, you are managing forces. And forces do not negotiate; they either submit or collide. Thus, you learn the language of quiet dominance. Not loud authority, but undeniable presence. Not coercion, but inevitability.

It is here that the phrase becomes truth: a godder demon I are. Not divine in benevolence, but in burden. Not demonic in malice, but in necessity. You are both creator and destroyer of trajectories, shaping outcomes while erasing illusions. You grant direction, but you also remove comfort. You elevate, but you also expose. And in doing so, you become something others rely on but cannot fully understand or forgive.

In conclusion

To lead leaders is to accept a paradox that corrodes the unprepared: the higher you rise in responsibility, the less you are allowed to remain whole. You must fracture, refine, and reconstruct yourself into something colder, sharper, and more enduring than the weight you carry. This is not a calling adorned with light, it is rather a descent masked as ascent. And those who survive it do not emerge as heroes, but as necessary contradictions; beings who have traded warmth for clarity, and in doing so, have become both the architect of order and the shadow it casts. They do not follow belief; they follow force disguised as clarity. To command them, you must outgrow persuasion. You must become a structure they cannot bend, a logic they cannot wax, a kind of cold truth that most sense but rarely articulate.

Carry a slay character that cuts so sharply that it strips leadership of its usual romance. Truth be admitted that: at higher levels, people aren’t moved by inspiration alone, they’re moved by certainty they cannot dismantle. Not loudness, not charisma, but something far more intimidating,,coherence that resists attack. Clarity in powerful spaces is less about truth and more about unquestionable framing. And the burden becomes that the leader of leaders must decide: do I become that immovable logic, or do I risk being outmanoeuvred by those who already have?.. .dp

_Another reflection from the intersection of commerce, power, and human behaviour.

Examining the human pulse beneath the corporate machinery, for the future rarely defeats defines of organizations, and more often, it simply waits for them to outgrow their own thinking.. .

¦KgeleLeso

Contributor: ChatGPT

©2K26. ddwebbtel publishing

  

[Corporate degeneracy a neo-generic code]

Every organization eventually becomes a reflection of the beliefs it refuses to question, thus I say:

Corporate decline rarely announces itself as scandal. It does not always erupt in dramatic implosion or headline-grabbing collapse. More often, it evolves quietly, not as chaos, but as normalization. What was once unacceptable becomes efficient. What was once questioned becomes policy. Degeneracy, in this form, is not rebellion against structure; it is the restructuring of ethics into something more convenient.

The modern corporation no longer decays through overt corruption alone. It adapts morality into a flexible framework, a neo-generic code to be exact. This code is not written in compliance manuals but embedded in incentives. Profit justifies ambiguity. Loyalty replaces integrity. Silence becomes professionalism. Over time, standards are not broken; they are redefined.

This degeneration is subtle because it disguises itself as optimization. Efficiency trims not only cost but conscience. Risk management becomes reputation management. Transparency becomes controlled disclosure. The language remains polished while the substance thins. It is not a collapse of governance, it’s a recalibration of thresholds.

What makes this neo-generic code powerful is its banality. It is no longer shocking. It is predictable. Employees internalize it, leaders rationalize it, and shareholders reward it. Ethical erosion becomes operational strategy. When enough institutions behave similarly, degeneracy ceases to look like deviation and begins to resemble industry standard.

Corporate degeneracy is rarely born from malice. It grows from incremental compromise, small concessions that accumulate into structural distortion. No single decision appears catastrophic. The damage lies in aggregation. Culture shifts by degrees until the original principles exist only as branding language.

The tragedy is not merely moral; it is strategic. Organizations that hollow out their internal compass may gain short-term advantage but sacrifice long-term resilience. Trust, once diluted, cannot be leveraged indefinitely. The neo-generic code optimizes for immediacy, not sustainability. It creates institutions that are agile but ethically weightless.

In conclusion

Corporate degeneracy does not wear the mask of villainy; it wears the suit of pragmatism. The danger lies not in visible corruption but in normalized compromise. When ethics become adjustable and integrity becomes optional, degeneration ceases to be an anomaly, it becomes a system. The real question is not whether corporations have codes, but whether their codes still contain conviction.. .dp

_Another reflection from the intersection of commerce, power, and human behaviour.

Examining the human pulse beneath the corporate machinery, for the future rarely defeats defines of organizations, and more often, it simply waits for them to outgrow their own thinking.. .

¦KgeleLeso

Contributor: ChatGPT

©2K26. ddwebbtel publishing

[A profiled soul]

Every organization eventually becomes a reflection of the beliefs it refuses to question, thus I say: 

A profiled soul is not merely observed, it is interpreted, segmented, and often reduced to patterns that fit a system’s need for clarity. In a world increasingly driven by data and metrics, the human essence is translated into behaviours, preferences, and predictive markers. Yet beneath the surface of every profile lies a contradiction: the soul is both knowable and elusive, measurable and mysterious. To profile it is to attempt control over what was never meant to be fully contained.

Psychologically, profiling begins as a means of understanding. It seeks to uncover motives, tendencies, and triggers that explain why individuals act as they do. The mind becomes a map, and patterns emerge as landmarks. However, the danger lies in mistaking the map for the territory. A person is not their habits alone, nor are they confined to their past behaviours. The soul evolves, resists categorization, and occasionally defies its own history.

In the commercial realm, the profiled soul becomes an asset. It is studied, monetized, and strategically engaged. Businesses no longer simply sell products, they sell to identities crafted through layers of data interpretation. Preferences become currency, and attention becomes the marketplace. The more accurately a soul is profiled, the more effectively it can be influenced. Yet this raises an uneasy question: at what point does understanding become exploitation?

Religion, in its various forms, has long engaged in its own form of profiling, though framed as discernment. It seeks to understand the moral and spiritual inclinations of individuals, often categorizing them as righteous, lost, faithful, or wayward. Unlike commercial profiling, however, religious interpretation tends to leave room for redemption and transformation. It acknowledges that the soul is not static, but in constant negotiation with higher meaning.

The tension between these domains: psychology, commerce, and religion, which reveals a deeper truth. Each attempts to define the soul within its own framework, yet none can fully capture it. Psychology explains behaviour, commerce predicts it, and religion seeks to guide it. Still, the soul remains partially hidden, resisting total comprehension. It is in this resistance that individuality is preserved.

There is also an ethical dimension to profiling. When individuals are reduced to data points or moral categories, the richness of their humanity risks being overlooked. Labels can become limitations, and expectations can shape outcomes. A profiled soul may begin to perform its own description, unconsciously aligning with the narrative imposed upon it. In this way, profiling does not just observe reality, but can create it as well.

In essence, there is power in awareness. To understand that one is being profiled is to reclaim a degree of autonomy. It invites introspection: who am I beyond the categories assigned to me? What parts of myself remain unseen, even by those who study me? This self-awareness disrupts the predictive models and reintroduces unpredictability into the equation.

Ultimately, the profiled soul exists at the intersection of visibility and depth. It is seen, but not fully known; understood, but never completely defined. It challenges systems that seek certainty and invites a more humble approach to interpretation. Perhaps the true nature of the soul is not to be profiled, but to be encountered again and again, in its evolving form.

In conclusion

To profile the soul is to engage in a necessary yet incomplete act. It offers insight, but not totality; direction, but not destiny. Whether through psychological frameworks, commercial strategies, or spiritual lenses, each attempt brings us closer to understanding, yet reminds us of the limits of that understanding. The soul, in its essence, resists final definition. It is not a fixed profile, but a living narrative, one that unfolds beyond prediction, beyond categorization, and ultimately, beyond control.. .dp

_Another reflection from the intersection of commerce, power, and human behaviour.

Examining the human pulse beneath the corporate machinery, for the future rarely defeats defines of organizations, and more often, it simply waits for them to outgrow their own thinking.. .

¦KgeleLeso

Contributor: ChatGPT

©2K26. ddwebbtel publishing

[Painful life of a failed entrepreneur]

Every organization eventually becomes a reflection of the beliefs it refuses to question, thus I say:

Failure in entrepreneurship is rarely treated as an event; it is treated as a diagnosis of character shame. The moment a business collapses, invoices remain unpaid, or a once-promising idea no longer attracts applause, society quietly begins to reduce the individual behind it into a cautionary exhibit. People do not merely say the venture failed; they begin behaving as though the person failed at being worthy of attention, respect, or significance. A successful entrepreneur is often romanticized as visionary, regimented, and brave, yet the failed entrepreneur is described with opposite language using the exact same actions as evidence. Risk-taking becomes recklessness, confidence becomes delusion, persistence becomes desperation, and hope itself is interpreted as intellectual weakness. It is one of the cruellest social reversals because the failed entrepreneur frequently carries the same work ethic, same sleepless nights, same sacrifices, and same aspiration they possessed before the collapse. What changes is not necessarily the person, but the public permission to admire them.

There is a humiliating silence that follows visible failure. Calls become shorter, invitations disappear, and conversations acquire an invisible hierarchy where the unsuccessful person speaks from beneath everyone else. Society claims to value resilience, yet it rarely respects people during the phase where resilience is actually required. The failed entrepreneur becomes someone others interact with carefully, almost as though failure were contagious. Family members begin offering disguised pity in the form of realistic advice, peers subtly distance themselves to preserve their own image, and former supporters revise history to make it appear they never truly believed in the vision from the beginning. This social abandonment creates a secondary suffering greater than financial loss itself, the realization that many relationships were not built around humanity, but around perceived momentum.

The modern world worships outcomes with such obsession that it no longer distinguishes between temporary defeat and permanent inferiority. Success grants permission to speak; failure forces a person into defensive explanation. The entrepreneur who once commanded rooms suddenly finds themselves over-explaining basic dignity. Even intelligence becomes questioned. Society assumes that if an idea failed financially, then every thought connected to its creator must also lack value. This is why failed entrepreneurs often experience psychological erosion long before economic recovery begins. They are not merely trying to rebuild money; they are trying to recover personhood from a culture that measures human worth through visible productivity and public victories.

What deepens the wound is the hypocrisy surrounding motivational culture. People celebrate stories of persistence only after success eventually arrives. They adore narratives of struggle when the ending is profitable enough to sanitize the suffering. But while someone is actively inside the storm, few wish to stand beside them. The entrepreneur struggling in real time is not inspirational to most observers; they are uncomfortable evidence that effort does not guarantee reward. Society prefers success stories because they preserve the illusion of fairness. Failed entrepreneurs disturb this illusion because they reveal that intelligence, sacrifice, and courage can still end in collapse. Their existence forces people to confront uncertainty, and many respond by blaming the victim to avoid confronting reality.

There is also a distinct loneliness in watching less capable individuals receive respect solely because their timing aligned with opportunity. The failed entrepreneur often understands systems, markets, negotiation, and human behaviour more deeply than many celebrated figures, yet knowledge without visible success is treated like invisible currency. Meanwhile, shallow achievement receives immediate worship. This imbalance creates bitterness not because the entrepreneur envies success itself, but because society distributes dignity according to profit margins. The person who survives by manipulation may receive admiration, while the person who failed attempting something meaningful is reduced to a warning sign. In this way, capitalism quietly transforms morality into optics.

The internal damage becomes severe when failure begins rewriting identity from within. The entrepreneur starts doubting not only the business model, but their own right to dream again. They become hyperaware of judgment in ordinary interactions. Even entering familiar spaces feels psychologically altered because they imagine people viewing them through the lens of collapse. Many withdraw socially, not because they hate people, but because repeated exposure to subtle disrespect becomes emotionally exhausting. There is pain in hearing motivational slogans from individuals who only respect ambition after it becomes profitable. There is pain in remembering how differently people once spoke to you when success still seemed possible.

Yet beneath all this darkness lies a brutal truth many refuse to acknowledge: failed entrepreneurs often possess a level of endurance that comfortable observers cannot comprehend. To attempt building something from uncertainty already demands psychological violence against fear. To fail publicly and still continue existing within a society obsessed with appearances requires another level of strength entirely. The failed entrepreneur walks through daily life carrying invisible ruins while still being expected to smile politely at people who measure worth through possessions, status, and outcomes. Their tragedy is not only economic; it is existential. They become witnesses to how conditional human respect can be.

In the end, the painful life of a failed entrepreneur is not defined only by bankruptcy, rejection, or broken plans. It is defined by discovering how quickly society subtracts humanity from those who no longer symbolize victory. Failure exposes hidden contracts beneath social behaviour: admiration is rented, attention is transactional, and dignity is often distributed according to visible achievement. The entrepreneur who loses everything does not merely lose income; they lose the illusion that people value individuals beyond utility and status.

Still, there remains something quietly powerful about those who survive such reduction without allowing bitterness to completely consume them. Even in humiliation, they carry evidence that they once dared to gamble certainty against possibility. And perhaps that is the unsettling contradiction society avoids confronting: many who are mocked for failing have experienced more courage in pursuit of purpose than those who safely criticize them from the comfort of untouched lives.

Their pain carries the emotional spine of the whole hurt, the idea that what truly breaks people is often not the financial loss itself, but the withdrawal of human warmth afterward, with dignity becoming conditional, humanity being measured through outcomes, and failure exposing hidden hierarchies in everyday relationships. It gives the experience a lingering aftertaste instead of just making a point, and, many people quietly live through that exact social reduction of dignity stifling politics of disrespect that sit right at the intersection of social reality and internal conflict without ever naming it aloud.

In conclusion

Perhaps the greatest cruelty faced by the failed entrepreneur is not the collapse of business, but the collapse of social tenderness around them. People suddenly speak with altered tones, altered expectations, and altered respect, as though financial defeat has stripped away intelligence, ambition, or humanity itself. Yet markets fail every day, economies fluctuate without morality, and timing alone has elevated many while destroying others of equal capability. The entrepreneur who loses everything often becomes a mirror society avoids because their existence exposes an uncomfortable truth: human worth is frequently negotiated through visible success rather than intrinsic value. In a world obsessed with winning, failure becomes treated not as a circumstance but as contamination.

Still, there is something disturbingly noble about those who continue existing after public disappointment has emptied rooms around them. To endure ridicule, silence, doubt, and internal collapse without entirely surrendering the will to imagine again is its own form of resistance. The failed entrepreneur may no longer possess the applause of society, but they possess intimate knowledge of instability, illusion, and conditional loyalty that comfortable spectators rarely understand. And perhaps history’s darkest irony is this: many people celebrated as visionaries today once lived through periods where the world treated them exactly like nobodies until success returned and rewrote the memory of their suffering.. .dp

_Another reflection from the intersection of commerce, power, and human behaviour.

Examining the human pulse beneath the corporate machinery, for the future rarely defeats defines of organizations, and more often, it simply waits for them to outgrow their own thinking.. .

¦KgeleLeso

Contributor: ChatGPT

©2K26. ddwebbtel publishing

 

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