Whose Land Are You On? What to Know About the Indigenous Land Back Movement | Lindsey Schneider |TED

61,566 views ・ 2023-01-03

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:04
I’m here today as a guest
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on land that was stolen from the Ute, Cheyenne and Arapaho Nations.
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Land that many other tribal nations thought of as home
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before those relationships were written over by settler colonialism.
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So land acknowledgments like this have become pretty commonplace --
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at the beginning of events, at universities,
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sometimes in our email signatures.
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But I've always found them to be kind of confusing.
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Once you admit something is stolen, aren’t you supposed to give it back?
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(Laughter)
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So if there’s anyone listening,
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who has a couple of hundred spare acres that you’re feeling guilty about,
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just contact your local tribal government.
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We would be happy to relieve you of that burden.
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(Laughter)
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That’s probably not you, right?
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Maybe you’ve heard of this movement to return land to Indigenous people.
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But you're thinking, "I can barely afford rent.
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What is it I'm supposed to be giving back?"
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That's what I want to clarify today.
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Because not only is getting land back in Indigenous hands in your best interests
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and the best interest of the land itself,
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there's ways anyone can help make it happen.
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I'm a descendant of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians,
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which is part of the Anishinaabe Nation of the Great Lakes region.
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Home for me is also the Pacific Northwest.
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I grew up on Kalapuya and Molalla territory,
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and now I'm a professor of Indigenous studies at CSU.
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My ancestors worked very hard to navigate a complex and changing world
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that was ravaged by settler colonialism.
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My grandma and both of her parents
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survived the trauma and abuse of the Indian boarding school system.
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The generation before them
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fought to keep our tribe from being terminated
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by the federal government.
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Going even further back,
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my six times great grandfather's signature
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is on the 1863 Treaty of Old Crossing,
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which forced the Anishinaabe to give up 11 million acres of what’s now Minnesota
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in exchange for a little over 400,000 dollars
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and a 640-acre reservation.
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That works out to about five cents an acre,
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which has to be one of the worst land deals in US history.
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Or maybe the best, depending on who you ask.
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This sort of thing happened all over the US and Canada.
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The problem isn't just that settlers showed up
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and took the land,
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it's how they've treated it ever since.
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That land we lost in Minnesota,
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the Enbridge's Line 3 pipeline goes right through the middle of it.
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That freaking pipeline is responsible for the largest inland oil spill
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ever recorded in the US.
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And now they're trying to expand it.
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Whether we're talking pipelines or some other industry,
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the colonial mindset has been about extracting resources,
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mostly with the goal of making the rich richer.
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But that's why Landback is not about Indigenous people
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trying to run a real estate scam.
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We're doing this
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because the land itself is in crisis.
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Every Indigenous culture is unique,
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but our shared philosophy is that we come from the land
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and the land is what sustains us.
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And therefore we have a responsibility to care for it.
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(Applause)
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Landback is about reasserting Indigenous relationships with the land.
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Relationships that are based on tens of thousands of years
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of hands-on experience taking care of our homelands.
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If you've ever tried your hand at farming or gardening,
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you know that land management takes more than just showing up with good intentions.
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Globally, Indigenous people are really good at managing for biodiversity
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and resilient ecosystems.
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That's because we've had generation upon generation
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to test out what works and what doesn't.
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There's tons of evidence and examples to back this up.
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One recent study shows that Indigenous people
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make up just five percent of the global population,
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but we’re managing nearly half the areas on Earth
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that are protected for conservation
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or still support intact ecosystems.
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In the United States, tribal nations have reintroduced endangered species
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even when the government said it wouldn't work.
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So in the northwest where I grew up,
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most of the big rivers have been dammed,
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which makes it super hard for salmon to survive
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and many runs have gone extinct.
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So back in the '90s,
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the Nimiipuu people told the state of Idaho,
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"Hey, we'd like to bring Coho salmon back to the Snake River."
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The state Fish and Wildlife guys were like, "I don't think so."
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But the tribe did it anyway.
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They got eggs that one of the hatcheries was going to throw away,
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incubated them and basically snuck the fish back into the river.
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And now they're doing so well,
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that the state has reopened the sport fishery.
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And the tribe is reintroducing Coho to a bunch of other rivers.
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Same thing with buffalo.
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Back in the 1800s, when the railroads were going in
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and native people were literally being kicked off the land at gunpoint,
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buffalo were nearly exterminated
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because they thought that would make it easier to subdue the tribes
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who depended on them.
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So get this.
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Most of the buffalo that you see today in zoos
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or wildlife reserves
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are actually descended from conservation herds
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that native people protected back then.
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And now the Blackfeet Nation is bringing free-ranging buffalo
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back to their homeland in Montana.
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We're also pretty good at cleaning up the ecological messes
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caused by colonialism.
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The town of Eureka, California,
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was like, "OK, we're ready to give some land back.
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We know it's culturally really important place to you.
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Oh, and by the way, it's a Superfund site, so it's hella polluted.
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Good luck with that."
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(Laughter)
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And the Wiyot tribe said, "Great, we'll take it."
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And now, they're in the process of successfully remediating the site.
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They've removed tons of trash and contaminated soil.
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(Applause)
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They're working on erosion control and wildlife habitat
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and making it a place where they can hold ceremonies again.
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The land is better off in Indigenous hands
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because we treat the land like it's a relative.
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(Applause)
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Even our youth know how this works.
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So I run a summer camp for native kids
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where we talk about Indigenous science and how we relate to the land.
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So last summer, after the camp wraps up, Henry's mom calls me.
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He's one of the campers, he's six.
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And she says he's had a falling out with his best friend.
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They were playing outside,
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and the friend, who's not native, was squishing grasshoppers for fun.
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Henry tried to stop him, and the friend said,
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"They're just bugs. It doesn't matter."
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But Henry told him, "They're not just bugs.
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There are our relatives and you can't kill them."
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So that was the summer I had to learn
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how to keep grasshoppers from eating my garden
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with garlic spray,
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because every time I went to use pesticides,
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or something that would kill them, I thought of Henry
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and what kind of future we might have
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if we actually lived like that.
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Landback is about radically rethinking how we relate to the land
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and other living beings.
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So look up whose land you're on.
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Some tribes, like the Ohlone and Duwamish,
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have a way for you to pay a voluntary land tax on their website
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as a way to recognize that you're a guest on their homeland.
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Way easier than dealing with the IRS.
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Or maybe you do own land, but you need to live there for now.
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You can set up a bequest in your will
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so that your estate goes back to the tribe.
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I'm not saying that any of this is easy.
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Unsettling is hard work,
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especially in places where Indigenous people were removed or erased.
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That absence tends to be papered over with the myth that colonialism worked.
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Native people disappeared,
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so there's nothing to worry about.
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But when I look at my own family's history,
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the government that took our land and outlawed our ceremonies,
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the boarding schools that took our language,
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the epidemic of sexual violence
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that has touched nearly every native woman in my family --
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all of these concerted efforts to end the story of us as Anishinaabe people.
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And yet despite all that, we're still here.
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Our survival as Indigenous people is a miracle.
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And the point of miracles is that they inspire action.
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I think if we're honest as human beings,
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we know that this path we're on
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is both morally untenable
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and ecologically unsustainable.
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Landback is a call to action.
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To get real that the current system
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is only really working for an increasingly smaller group of folks.
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But when the people who are benefiting from this legacy of stolen land
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step forward,
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real change can happen.
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This isn't just an opportunity to right a past injustice.
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It's the only way to heal the land itself.
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And that means a better future for everyone.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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