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About

Helen Keller Denial refers to a conspiracy theory denying various aspects of author and activist Helen Keller's life, including her disabilities, her ability to write, the claim that she flew a plane and sometimes her entire existence. The belief spread online throughout 2020, mainly through videos on TikTok. In February 2021, the term "Helen Keller" trended on Twitter as users reacted to the theory.

Origin

At the end of 2019 leading into 2020, a trend where TikTokers[2][3] would make fun of Helen Keller began on the platform, largely collected under the hashtag #HelenKeller (popular examples shown below).

https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6748172933354573062
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6828686275042610438

On May 3rd, 2020, TikToker[1] @mygrandmaslooselip uploaded a video showing an image of a blind eye and comparing it to a photograph of Helen Keller, claiming that because her eye looks functional Keller was lying (shown below). The video gained over 540,000 views in nine months and is one of the first videos on the platform denying an aspect of her existence.

https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6822797573221305605

Shortly after sparkletittiez video, other TikTokers began posting Helen Keller denial videos to the platform, primarily under the hashtags #helenkeller, #helenkellerisfake and #helenkellerisoverparty. For example, on May 25th, TikToker[9] @dormammuivecometobargain uploaded a video denying Keller's existence (shown below, left). On June 11th, TikToker[15] @angtheestallion posted a video claiming Keller is racist, a belief that is attributed with the conspiracy theory and the #helenkellerisoverparty (shown below, right). Note that some posters under the hashtag appear to want to cancel Keller for alleged racism and don't necessarily believe she doesn't exist.

https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6830962838140439814
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6837235861596245254

On July 26th, TikToker[10] @xgamemod3 uploaded a video questioning Keller's existence (shown below).

https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6853702852603333893

Spread

On May 13th, 2020, Isabella Lahoue published a story to Medium [4] titled, "The Generation that Doesn’t Believe Helen Keller Existed" in which she describes finding out about the conspiracy theory while scrolling through TikTok, noting that it was mostly teenagers taking part in it. She theorizes that Keller isn't taught as thoroughly in school as she should be, leading to teenagers not understanding how someone in her position can learn to speak and write. The article has since been removed.

On the same day, TikToker[5] angel_cortez posted a now-deleted video denying Helen Keller's disabilities, garnering over 709,000 views in just under eight months. On September 10th, TikToker[6] vanillaapricot uploaded a skit where Keller accidentally waves back at her gardener, gaining over 10 million views in just under four months (shown below).

https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6871034467809512709

On December 10th, TikToker[18] @krunk19 uploaded a video denying Keller's existence, citing her handwriting, number of books written and the fact that she flew a plane as evidence, which garnered over 2.2 million views in two months (shown below).

https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6908910170391235846

On January 5th, 2021, Twitter user[7] Daniel Kunka made a series of tweets talking about how his nieces and nephews were asked in a text chain if they knew about Helen Keller, to which they responded that she was a non-existent fraud (shown below). He details trying to convince his nieces otherwise but failing, with them insisting that others around her "pumped" Keller up and made her career. Kunka theorizes that this conspiracy about Keller could be due to "four years of fake news." The tweet thread received over 24,100 likes, 5,300 retweets and 3,700 quote tweets in three days.

Daniel Kunka @unikunka Guys, something insane happened to me today. I am on a text chain with my teenage nieces and nephews along with my mom (their grandma) and today my mom asked them if they knew who Helen Keller was... And their response was that Helen Keller was a fraud who didn't exist.
Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 Replying to @unikunka At first I thought they were trolling grandma, which is admittedly fun. But after awhile it was clear they weren't joking. 000 "How could someone be deaf and blind and learn how to write books?" My nephew admits she probably existed but was probably only one or the other. 65 27 223 4.3К Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 I sill thought I was getting trolled so I asked if I was getting trolled and they 000 were adamant -- Helen Keller was a fraud. So then I did some Googling to find out some relevant information to prove her existence and found this:
Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 000 This is like a real thing. "Well how do you know she's real if you weren't there to see her?" "Cause I've seen THE MIRACLE WORKER. Do you think Abraham Lincoln is real even though we didn't see him?" Then they sent me an eye-rolling emojii. 62 27 176 4.4K Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 000 They all believe Abe was real and did the things he did. They don't believe Helen could have been blind and deaf and did everything that she did. "Cause the things he did were actually realistic." 17 196 3.8K Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 They are sticking to their guns. They believe people around her "pumped her up" and wrote the book for her. The do not believe in Helen Keller. And apparently 15 million others on TikTok feel the same way.
Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 00 And we wonder what the cost of four years of "fake news" and "conspiracy theories" is... We're all just one TikTok away from being erased from an entire generation. 80 27 1.1K 11.9K Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 000 Also -- my nieces and nephews are all bright and well-intentioned. This isn't from lack of education or empathy. This is more about how group think can travel through social media like a virus until it suddenly just becomes the truth I think. 144 27 517 O 7.6K Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 Thank you for all the responses about abelism to this post. This is 100% a teachable moment and I plan to do my part with 4 certain teenagers... But also -- if you know a teenager -- l'd ask them about this sooner than later.
Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 00 By far the most enlightening thing to happen in the last 2 hours are all the responses about abelism and how this is a microcosm of the challenges disabled people face every day. I'm retweeting as many as I can into my timeline but keep them coming please. 191 27 268 5.6K Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 6 Update - if a joke on TikTok (as apparently this "fraud" started) can poison young minds the thread about it going viral can change minds back... Have had a discussion about abelism with my N&Ns and ordered @HabenGirma's book for them. Never too late to go down the right path.

On January 6th, 2021, Newsweek[17] published an article detailing the conspiracy. On January 7th, Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett published an article about Helen Keller denial on TikTok to The Guardian,[8] where she claims that the conspiracy theory is ableist.

On January 19th, YouTuber[12] Atozy uploaded a video discussing TikTok's Helen Keller denial videos, garnering over 125,000 views in five weeks (shown below).

On February 9th, 2021, TikToker[11] @baylieswackhamer posted a video with the on-screen caption, "a conspiracy theory i believe" followed by her evidence towards the statement, including her handwriting and the fact she wrote 12 books, garnering over 1.7 million views in two weeks (shown below).


https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6927415091772083462

On an unknown date prior to February 21st, TikToker[13] and teacher Samuel Sleeves uploaded a video filming himself while asking his students about various historical figures and events, to which none of them know the answers. At one point in the video, he asks them who Helen Keller is, to which they give a variety of wrong answers, including that she's a "male Nazi" and that she outright doesn't exist.

The original video has since been removed but was reuploaded by Twitter[14] user @jamie2181 on February 21st under the caption, "So this is terrifying. History teacher discussing major events with Gen Z students" garnering over 33,900 likes and 16,200 retweets in two days (shown below).

The term "Helen Keller" started Trending on Twitter that day as the video spread. On the same day, Twitter[16] user @clay_png tweeted, "Helen Keller being racist is one of the funniest things ever," garnering over 100,000 likes and 6,100 retweets in two days.

On February 22nd, Twitter[19] user @RTide69 posted a tweet implying the internet is making everyone dumber, which is why people fall for conspiracies like this, garnering over 7,100 likes and 950 retweets in a day (shown below, left). On the same day, Twitter[20] user @shinnick_g made a post reminding people that popular conspiracy theories are fake, garnering over 8,700 likes and 1,300 retweets in a comparable span of time (shown below, right).

RollTide69 ... @RTide69 Helen Keller wasn't real. The Earth is flat. The moon landing wasn't real. Covid-19 isn't real. The election was stolen. Or Americans are getting dumber via the internet. Conspiracy verywell
Kevin G Shinnick @shinnick_g Just to correct Qwazies - HELEN KELLER existed The Holocaust happened The Earth is Round Biden LEGALLY won the election We hope this helps you deal with reality.

The conspiracy theory gained significant media attention over the course of the day, including stories from Daily Mail,[21] Yahoo! Life[22] and Distractify.[23]

Many expressed frustration over the fact that people would deny Keller's existence. For example, on February 22nd, Twitter[24] user @kalasaurus tweeted, "Do yourself a favor and don't try to figure out why Helen Keller is trending," garnering over 4,000 likes in a day (shown below, left). Later that day, Twitter[25] @1Schoolhouse tweeted expressing her sadness as a person with disabilities at seeing why the term was trending, garnering over 3,100 likes and 400 retweets in a comparable span of time (shown below, right).

Kala A @kalasaurus Do yourself a favor and don't try to figure out why Helen Keller is trending. Politics · Trending Helen Keller 4,536 Tweets
Online 1 Room Schoolhouse @1Schoolhouse That moment when you're disabled and you see that disabled icon Helen Keller is trending+get excited because lots of people don't talk about disabled issues- but then the tweets are mocking her disability+discrediting her accomplishments and you feel like society's punchline again 16 · Politics · Trending Helen Keller 7,817 Tweets

Various Examples

https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6911779282721230085
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6919131489812761862
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6911972484719856902
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6831343120601386245
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6914743766754643205
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6829003665135684869

Search Interest

External References

[1] TikTok – mygrandmaslooselip

[2] TIkTok – real life footage (page unavailable)

[3] TikTok – vlaadz

[4] Medium (via Wayback Machine) – The Generation that Doesn’t Believe Helen Keller Existed

[5] TikTok – :((( (page unavailable)

[6] TikTok – the anti helen keller fandom lives on

[7] Twitter – Guys, something insane happened to me today.

[8] The Guardian – Helen Keller: why is a TikTok conspiracy theory undermining her story?

[9] TikTok – #helenkellerisoverparty

[10] TikTok – HelenK🙈🙉 is typing.

[11] TikTok – Reply to @ace_fool

[12] YouTube – TikTok doesn’t believe Helen Keller Existed…

[13] TikTok – samuelsleeves?

[14] Twitter – So this is terrifying. History teacher discussing major events with Gen Z students.?

[15] TikTok – How you blind, deaf, and racist

[16] Twitter – Helen Keller being racist is one of the funniest things ever

[17] Newsweek – TikTok Awash With Bizarre Videos Questioning Whether Helen Keller Existed

[18] TikTok – Helen Keller was a fraud?

[19] Twitter – @RTide69

[20] Twitter – Just to correct Qwazies

[21] Daily Mail – History teacher is left horrified with his Gen Z students who don't know who HITLER is, call disability rights advocate Helen Keller a 'Nazi' and D-Day a 'rapper'

[22] Yahoo – Is This Viral Helen Keller TikTok Scary Evidence That Our Kids Aren't Learning History?

[23] Distractify – Yes, Helen Keller Was Real and Yes, She Did Write All of Those Books

[24] - Do yourself a favor and don't try to figure out why Helen Keller is trending.

[25] Twitter – That moment when



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Load 103 Comments
tiktok is so toxic. people are
literally denying the fact
that helen keller ever
existed & discrediting her | 
SIKE there is NO way she was
real you're telling me she was
blind. deaf, wrote 12 books.
learned 5 languages. rode a
bike, fell Out Of a building
and DIDN'T die, went to
harvard. new a plane & had
realty good handwriting
umm try again...

Helen Keller Denial

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About

Helen Keller Denial refers to a conspiracy theory denying various aspects of author and activist Helen Keller's life, including her disabilities, her ability to write, the claim that she flew a plane and sometimes her entire existence. The belief spread online throughout 2020, mainly through videos on TikTok. In February 2021, the term "Helen Keller" trended on Twitter as users reacted to the theory.

Origin

At the end of 2019 leading into 2020, a trend where TikTokers[2][3] would make fun of Helen Keller began on the platform, largely collected under the hashtag #HelenKeller (popular examples shown below).


https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6748172933354573062
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6828686275042610438

On May 3rd, 2020, TikToker[1] @mygrandmaslooselip uploaded a video showing an image of a blind eye and comparing it to a photograph of Helen Keller, claiming that because her eye looks functional Keller was lying (shown below). The video gained over 540,000 views in nine months and is one of the first videos on the platform denying an aspect of her existence.


https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6822797573221305605

Shortly after sparkletittiez video, other TikTokers began posting Helen Keller denial videos to the platform, primarily under the hashtags #helenkeller, #helenkellerisfake and #helenkellerisoverparty. For example, on May 25th, TikToker[9] @dormammuivecometobargain uploaded a video denying Keller's existence (shown below, left). On June 11th, TikToker[15] @angtheestallion posted a video claiming Keller is racist, a belief that is attributed with the conspiracy theory and the #helenkellerisoverparty (shown below, right). Note that some posters under the hashtag appear to want to cancel Keller for alleged racism and don't necessarily believe she doesn't exist.


https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6830962838140439814
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6837235861596245254

On July 26th, TikToker[10] @xgamemod3 uploaded a video questioning Keller's existence (shown below).


https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6853702852603333893

Spread

On May 13th, 2020, Isabella Lahoue published a story to Medium [4] titled, "The Generation that Doesn’t Believe Helen Keller Existed" in which she describes finding out about the conspiracy theory while scrolling through TikTok, noting that it was mostly teenagers taking part in it. She theorizes that Keller isn't taught as thoroughly in school as she should be, leading to teenagers not understanding how someone in her position can learn to speak and write. The article has since been removed.

On the same day, TikToker[5] angel_cortez posted a now-deleted video denying Helen Keller's disabilities, garnering over 709,000 views in just under eight months. On September 10th, TikToker[6] vanillaapricot uploaded a skit where Keller accidentally waves back at her gardener, gaining over 10 million views in just under four months (shown below).


https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6871034467809512709

On December 10th, TikToker[18] @krunk19 uploaded a video denying Keller's existence, citing her handwriting, number of books written and the fact that she flew a plane as evidence, which garnered over 2.2 million views in two months (shown below).


https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6908910170391235846

On January 5th, 2021, Twitter user[7] Daniel Kunka made a series of tweets talking about how his nieces and nephews were asked in a text chain if they knew about Helen Keller, to which they responded that she was a non-existent fraud (shown below). He details trying to convince his nieces otherwise but failing, with them insisting that others around her "pumped" Keller up and made her career. Kunka theorizes that this conspiracy about Keller could be due to "four years of fake news." The tweet thread received over 24,100 likes, 5,300 retweets and 3,700 quote tweets in three days.


Daniel Kunka @unikunka Guys, something insane happened to me today. I am on a text chain with my teenage nieces and nephews along with my mom (their grandma) and today my mom asked them if they knew who Helen Keller was... And their response was that Helen Keller was a fraud who didn't exist. Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 Replying to @unikunka At first I thought they were trolling grandma, which is admittedly fun. But after awhile it was clear they weren't joking. 000 "How could someone be deaf and blind and learn how to write books?" My nephew admits she probably existed but was probably only one or the other. 65 27 223 4.3К Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 I sill thought I was getting trolled so I asked if I was getting trolled and they 000 were adamant -- Helen Keller was a fraud. So then I did some Googling to find out some relevant information to prove her existence and found this: Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 000 This is like a real thing. "Well how do you know she's real if you weren't there to see her?" "Cause I've seen THE MIRACLE WORKER. Do you think Abraham Lincoln is real even though we didn't see him?" Then they sent me an eye-rolling emojii. 62 27 176 4.4K Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 000 They all believe Abe was real and did the things he did. They don't believe Helen could have been blind and deaf and did everything that she did. "Cause the things he did were actually realistic." 17 196 3.8K Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 They are sticking to their guns. They believe people around her "pumped her up" and wrote the book for her. The do not believe in Helen Keller. And apparently 15 million others on TikTok feel the same way. Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 00 And we wonder what the cost of four years of "fake news" and "conspiracy theories" is... We're all just one TikTok away from being erased from an entire generation. 80 27 1.1K 11.9K Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 000 Also -- my nieces and nephews are all bright and well-intentioned. This isn't from lack of education or empathy. This is more about how group think can travel through social media like a virus until it suddenly just becomes the truth I think. 144 27 517 O 7.6K Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 Thank you for all the responses about abelism to this post. This is 100% a teachable moment and I plan to do my part with 4 certain teenagers... But also -- if you know a teenager -- l'd ask them about this sooner than later. Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 5 00 By far the most enlightening thing to happen in the last 2 hours are all the responses about abelism and how this is a microcosm of the challenges disabled people face every day. I'm retweeting as many as I can into my timeline but keep them coming please. 191 27 268 5.6K Daniel Kunka @unikunka · Jan 6 Update - if a joke on TikTok (as apparently this "fraud" started) can poison young minds the thread about it going viral can change minds back... Have had a discussion about abelism with my N&Ns and ordered @HabenGirma's book for them. Never too late to go down the right path.

On January 6th, 2021, Newsweek[17] published an article detailing the conspiracy. On January 7th, Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett published an article about Helen Keller denial on TikTok to The Guardian,[8] where she claims that the conspiracy theory is ableist.

On January 19th, YouTuber[12] Atozy uploaded a video discussing TikTok's Helen Keller denial videos, garnering over 125,000 views in five weeks (shown below).



On February 9th, 2021, TikToker[11] @baylieswackhamer posted a video with the on-screen caption, "a conspiracy theory i believe" followed by her evidence towards the statement, including her handwriting and the fact she wrote 12 books, garnering over 1.7 million views in two weeks (shown below).


https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6927415091772083462


On an unknown date prior to February 21st, TikToker[13] and teacher Samuel Sleeves uploaded a video filming himself while asking his students about various historical figures and events, to which none of them know the answers. At one point in the video, he asks them who Helen Keller is, to which they give a variety of wrong answers, including that she's a "male Nazi" and that she outright doesn't exist.

The original video has since been removed but was reuploaded by Twitter[14] user @jamie2181 on February 21st under the caption, "So this is terrifying. History teacher discussing major events with Gen Z students" garnering over 33,900 likes and 16,200 retweets in two days (shown below).



The term "Helen Keller" started Trending on Twitter that day as the video spread. On the same day, Twitter[16] user @clay_png tweeted, "Helen Keller being racist is one of the funniest things ever," garnering over 100,000 likes and 6,100 retweets in two days.

On February 22nd, Twitter[19] user @RTide69 posted a tweet implying the internet is making everyone dumber, which is why people fall for conspiracies like this, garnering over 7,100 likes and 950 retweets in a day (shown below, left). On the same day, Twitter[20] user @shinnick_g made a post reminding people that popular conspiracy theories are fake, garnering over 8,700 likes and 1,300 retweets in a comparable span of time (shown below, right).


RollTide69 ... @RTide69 Helen Keller wasn't real. The Earth is flat. The moon landing wasn't real. Covid-19 isn't real. The election was stolen. Or Americans are getting dumber via the internet. Conspiracy verywell Kevin G Shinnick @shinnick_g Just to correct Qwazies - HELEN KELLER existed The Holocaust happened The Earth is Round Biden LEGALLY won the election We hope this helps you deal with reality.

The conspiracy theory gained significant media attention over the course of the day, including stories from Daily Mail,[21] Yahoo! Life[22] and Distractify.[23]

Many expressed frustration over the fact that people would deny Keller's existence. For example, on February 22nd, Twitter[24] user @kalasaurus tweeted, "Do yourself a favor and don't try to figure out why Helen Keller is trending," garnering over 4,000 likes in a day (shown below, left). Later that day, Twitter[25] @1Schoolhouse tweeted expressing her sadness as a person with disabilities at seeing why the term was trending, garnering over 3,100 likes and 400 retweets in a comparable span of time (shown below, right).


Kala A @kalasaurus Do yourself a favor and don't try to figure out why Helen Keller is trending. Politics · Trending Helen Keller 4,536 Tweets Online 1 Room Schoolhouse @1Schoolhouse That moment when you're disabled and you see that disabled icon Helen Keller is trending+get excited because lots of people don't talk about disabled issues- but then the tweets are mocking her disability+discrediting her accomplishments and you feel like society's punchline again 16 · Politics · Trending Helen Keller 7,817 Tweets

Various Examples


https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6911779282721230085
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6919131489812761862
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6911972484719856902
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6831343120601386245
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6914743766754643205
https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/6829003665135684869

Search Interest

External References

[1] TikTok – mygrandmaslooselip

[2] TIkTok – real life footage (page unavailable)

[3] TikTok – vlaadz

[4] Medium (via Wayback Machine) – The Generation that Doesn’t Believe Helen Keller Existed

[5] TikTok – :((( (page unavailable)

[6] TikTok – the anti helen keller fandom lives on

[7] Twitter – Guys, something insane happened to me today.

[8] The Guardian – Helen Keller: why is a TikTok conspiracy theory undermining her story?

[9] TikTok – #helenkellerisoverparty

[10] TikTok – HelenK🙈🙉 is typing.

[11] TikTok – Reply to @ace_fool

[12] YouTube – TikTok doesn’t believe Helen Keller Existed…

[13] TikTok – samuelsleeves?

[14] Twitter – So this is terrifying. History teacher discussing major events with Gen Z students.?

[15] TikTok – How you blind, deaf, and racist

[16] Twitter – Helen Keller being racist is one of the funniest things ever

[17] Newsweek – TikTok Awash With Bizarre Videos Questioning Whether Helen Keller Existed

[18] TikTok – Helen Keller was a fraud?

[19] Twitter – @RTide69

[20] Twitter – Just to correct Qwazies

[21] Daily Mail – History teacher is left horrified with his Gen Z students who don't know who HITLER is, call disability rights advocate Helen Keller a 'Nazi' and D-Day a 'rapper'

[22] Yahoo – Is This Viral Helen Keller TikTok Scary Evidence That Our Kids Aren't Learning History?

[23] Distractify – Yes, Helen Keller Was Real and Yes, She Did Write All of Those Books

[24] - Do yourself a favor and don't try to figure out why Helen Keller is trending.

[25] Twitter – That moment when

Recent Videos 23 total

Recent Images 9 total


Top Comments

wisehowl_the_2nd
wisehowl_the_2nd

Disinformation memes are the most dangerous ones. Seeing how deep-rooted they can become in public conscious to the point where everyone just accepts "yeah that's how it happened" is scary to see. One of the reasons I and a lot of other people like to speak out against censorship is to let these ideas out of their safe spaces so they can be challenged by the public. Even then though I wonder how many lies have been told over the year that have just been completely accepted and irreversibly rooted in public fact.

Truly memes are the modern-day propaganda.

[insert Metal Gear Rising Revengeance meme here]

+107
sofacady
sofacady

They are saying the truth. Equally, Stephen Hawking wasn't real. Or Beethoven. Or… You know what, fuck it. I know that it sounds impossible, but you know what? People did the impossible. We created the capacity of flight trought the air, people survived in the worst cases scenarios and in some of them we make them our houses. And you are telling me that a deaf-blind woman couldn't have written books?

Yes, it's difficult, I am not denying it. But with the power of memory you can do a lot of things. Now please, ban TikTok forever. This isn't cringe, this is putrid AIDS.

+53

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