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Thursday, October 2, 2025

Ottawa school trustee Nili Kaplan-Myrth appeals code of conduct decision

Ottawa-Carleton District School Board trustee Nili Kaplan-Myrth has filed an appeal against a decision by fellow trustees that she breached the board’s code of conduct.

The decision to sanction Kaplan-Myrth, which included a ban on attending the board’s January meeting, was made Dec. 19 by the other trustees; she is also barred from sitting on five committees for the next three months. 

Kaplan-Myrth and two other colleagues, Donna Dickson and Donna Blackburn were all under investigation by the board’s integrity commissioner, Suzanne Craig, based on several complaints against them.

According to a 185-page report released on Dec. 15,  Craig found that Kaplan-Myrth and Blackburn engaged in a “yelling match” during and after a meeting last September. 

Craig determined Kaplan-Myrth had violated the code of conduct when she ignored a security plan created by school staff so that she could speak with reporters following the meeting. Craig also found Kaplan-Myrth’s social media account to be one which “discredits and compromises the integrity of the board and has contributed to conflict rather than resolution of issues with her trustee colleagues.” 

The investigation into Dickson and Blackburn did not lead to evidence that either of them breached the code. Dickson has since called for Kaplan-Myrth’s resignation.

Kaplan-Myrth filed the appeal on Monday, with her lawyer, Mark Freiman, citing incorrect and incomplete facts within the report. 

According to Freiman, complaints against Kaplan-Myrth were treated “in radically different ways,” compared to those of Dickson and Blackburn. 

In the past year, Kaplan-Myrth has been under two separate investigations regarding her conduct. 

She was investigated in early 2023 for seeking support for a temporary masking mandate for students, accusing Dickson, who is black, of siding with “white supremacists” for not supporting her motion. 

Kaplan managed to beat the board’s vote on that incident, as at least eight out of the 12 trustee votes were required to find her in violation of the code of conduct. Only seven voted in favour of a breach while four abstained. 

The second incident revolves around the Sept. 11 yelling match during and after a board meeting, wherein Blackburn accused Kaplan-Myrth of being a “white woman attacking a black woman.”

Kaplan-Myrth interrupted Blackburn and responded by saying, “I object, you will not characterize me as a white woman. I am a Jewish woman who has received daily antisemitic death threats for standing up for health and safety. You have been out to get me from Day 1.”

Following the yelling match, all three women who were under investigation gave media interviews. 

Frieman argues in the appeal that Craig’s report doesn’t adequately address Kaplan-Myrth’s complaints regarding antisemitism, which she feels have “been ignored or swept under the rug,” and that the board’s lack of action on this matter may have made Kaplan-Myrth more vulnerable to harm as a result. 

Kaplan-Myrth filed a complaint with the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario on Dec. 14, alleging she has been the target of numerous antisemitic death threats and slurs from members of the public ever since her election to the board in the fall of 2022. 

The complaint also claims that trustees and senior staff “dismissed the gravity of the situation.”

She requested a leave of absence as trustee on Dec. 20, however, as of Monday she has yet to receive any response, according to the Ottawa Citizen

Additionally, Kaplan-Myrth complained to the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, claiming that internal board emails were given to Rebel News under an access to information request. 

One of the emails released details of a staff member telling another about “concerns regarding Nili’s safety plan and her disregard for our efforts.”

Another email from a trustee claimed that they witnessed Kaplan Myrth “bate (sic) the Rebel News reporter by circling the path near the parking lot,” while a protest was taking place there in June.

Kaplan-Myrth said she was only made aware of the emails being released on Monday because of an article published by Rebel News about the exchange.

“The way it was done was not OK,” said Kaplan-Myrth. “The underlying message is that if I get death threats and my safety is jeopardized, then it must be my fault.”

Frieman believes that the code of conduct is being used inappropriately against Kaplan-Myrth.

“In this case, it’s being used to sanction someone who is saying things that are unpopular, or that make the board look bad. The Charter protects freedom of expression. People like trustees are supposed to advocate and speak their minds. They should be protected,” said Freiman.

Honda meets with federal government officials over potential new EV plant

Representatives of Honda are set to meet with senior government officials this week as rumours circulate that the Japanese automaker may be looking to open an $18.4 billion electric vehicle plant in Canada. 

This follows a meeting last month between senior executives from Honda Canada and Honda Global and Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne, according to CBC News

Nikkei Asia, a Japanese news outlet, reported that Honda has been toying with the idea of making an $18.4 billion investment in Canada to build an EV plant that would also manufacture batteries. 

According to the report, Honda is expected to make its final decision on the project before the end of 2024, with a potential opening date for as early as 2028.   

The Japanese automaker is still scouting several potential locations for the plant, including Alliston, Ont., where it already has an existing facility.

Honda has a target goal of producing only EV’s by the year 2040 and is currently looking into “a number of initiatives” to make that a reality, noted a spokesperson for the company.

“Currently, we are focused on the EV Hub we are establishing in Ohio, where we will begin production of EVs and EV batteries in North America in late 2025,” said the spokesperson.

Champagne would not comment publicly on the potential Honda deal but did say that his government was working to promote Canada as a country at the forefront of EV production to get the attention of investors.  

“Reports about Honda looking to make a significant investment in Canada speaks to the quality of (Canada’s) workforce and the strength of our industry,” said Champagne in a statement. 

Several deals were announced last year with major EV battery producers like Stellantis-LGES, Northvolt and Volkswagen, all with federal and provincial government investment behind them. 

Governments estimate that investment to be $37.7 billion over the next decade, with $32.8 billion going towards production subsidies and $4.9 billion to aid building costs. 

According to the Parliamentary Budget Officer, 62% of the costs will be paid for by the federal government and the remaining 38% will be covered by provincial governments.

The high level of corporate welfare involved in these recent deals has been the subject of some controversy

That was even before it was made public that the Stellantis plant intends to use temporary foreign workers from South Korea to set up the plant, which could see a loss of $300 million to Canadians. 

RCMP arrest Rebel News journalist after questioning Chrystia Freeland

Rebel News.

Rebel News journalist David Menzies was arrested on Monday during a memorial service in Richmond Hill commemorating the victims of Flight PS752 for attempting to question Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland on a public street. 

The police officer who arrested Menzies said it was for assaulting a police officer, which he accused Menzies of doing while walking alongside Freeland.

Menzies was asking Freeland why the Liberal government hasn’t labelled Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps a terrorist entity.

The arrest unfolded as Menzies was physically obstructed by an unidentified plainclothes police officer who appears to be with the RCMP. Video footage captures the moment when the situation escalates, with Menzies surrounded by officers and eventually escorted away in a police car. 

Menzies asks the police officer on two occasions for his name and badge number, but the officer does not provide it.

Menzies told True North he was released later without charges.

“This is what they do to journalists,” Menzies said in the video as he was being escorted away. “I was merely trying to scrum Minister Freeland and the RCMP officer blocked me, and evidently this is a trumped-up charge of assault, folks. I came here to do my job and now I’m handcuffed.”

The arrest was condemned by Andrew Lawton, the president of the Independent Press Gallery of Canada. (Lawton is also True North’s managing editor).

“Police are there to uphold the law and public safety, not to prevent politicians from being asked questions by journalists who the government will not permit to ask questions in official settings,” Lawton said in a statement Monday night.

“The Independent Press Gallery calls on police, particularly those tasked with protecting elected officials, to cease the practice of arresting working journalists who are not posing a threat to public safety or breaking the law.”

This incident marks the second time Menzies has faced difficulties for attempting to question the Trudeau government. 

Two years ago, he was accosted by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s bodyguards on a public street in Toronto.

Rebel News has drawn attention to the contrasting treatments their journalists receive when compared to pro-Hamas protesters. 

While the former faces arrests and physical obstruction, the latter receives police escorts and even coffee deliveries during disruptive activities.

Ratio’d | German farmers REVOLT against socialist government

Massive farmer protests have taken over Germany over the past few weeks. In scenes similar to the historic Freedom Convoy, German farmers and truckers have united in protest over new climate regulations which will scrap a tax subsidy on farmers operating diesel tractors. Germany’s ruling socialist coalition is the latest Western European country to target farmers on their quest to somehow solve climate change but it appears they have pushed the German people too far this time.

All throughout Germany, farmers are engaging in peaceful demonstrations as their livelihoods have been put at risk. In support of the German farmers, Polish farmers, Dutch farmers and Romanian farmers are also staging their own protests.

The equation is simple. No farmers = no food. With similar climate measures currently in the works to target Canadian farmers, this is a story that Canadians should be watching closely.

Watch the latest episode of Ratio’d with Harrison Faulkner!

Military full of white supremacy, patriarchy, official Canadian Armed Forces journal says

Nearly every article in the latest issue of the Canadian Military Journal was devoted to critical race theory and disparaging “whiteness” in the military. 

With titles like “‘I’m Not Your Typical White Soldier’: Interrogating Whiteness and Power in the Canadian Armed Forces” and “Supporting Military Families: Challenging or Reinforcing Patriarchy?” Canadians might think they were reading radical academic papers and not the Canadian Armed Forces’ official publication. 

The articles in the summer 2023 edition assert that the Canadian Armed Forces are inherently founded on the principles of white supremacy, colonialism, and patriarchy. 

Academics from unrelated fields such as gender identity and women’s studies advocate for the wholesale adoption of critical race theory to address perceived issues within the military.

The recurring theme throughout the articles is the assertion that the military perpetuates various -isms and -archies, from patriarchy to ableism, all rooted in white supremacy. 

A search of the word “white” found that it appears 190 times, painting a picture of a military institution deeply embedded in a colonial legacy that allegedly marginalizes racial minorities.

“The (Canadian Armed Forces) is both a product and an instrument of the white settler colonial state,” write authors Mount Saint Vincent University gender researcher Maya Eichler and assistant professor Vanessa Brown. 

“As a white settler colonial institution, the military has historically reproduced white privilege and the marginalization of racialized ‘others.’”

These concepts seem to be top of mind for the military’s leadership, despite the fact that the Canadian Armed Forces faces an unprecedented crisis in recruiting and retaining personnel.

Vice-Admiral Angus Topshee, the Royal Canadian Navy’s commander, recently said in a year-end warning that the force was unable to meet its operational commitments in 2024 with current rates of recruitment. The navy alone is facing shortages numbered at 20% or higher. 

The number of new recruits has dwindled even lower with the Canadian Armed Forces only seeing 5,242 new members in 2022, down 35% in 2021. 

Meanwhile, the Department of National Defence and senior military leadership have looked on approvingly as the Canadian Armed Forces have been ordered to fight white supremacy, heteronormativity, and become an “anti-racist” organization via numerous military directives

The proposed solution to these perceived problems is replacing military training with a re-education program based on the ideology dear to the academic authors. They propose an even more extensive integration of critical race theory into military education and training than the current affirmative action practices.

“The dominant approach focused on increasing racial diversity is not sufficient to address the systemic embeddedness of white supremacy within military culture,” write Eichler and Brown. 

“(The military must) integrate critical theories and an anti-oppression framework into professional military education and training, and into all institutional systems, structures, processes, and procedures.” 

Tammy George, an assistant professor at York University, takes it a step further by urging the military to root out “everyday instances of whiteness.” She argues that naming and displacing so-called whiteness from its status are necessary steps to challenge the foundational elements of the Canadian nation, in which the military plays an integral part.

“While the threat of white supremacy should not be dismissed, focussing on extreme cases obscures everyday forms of whiteness,” writes George. “Very rarely do scholars address the nuanced everyday ways in which white supremacy works to consolidate whiteness in Western militaries.”

The call for ongoing re-education to eliminate vestiges of colonialism and “whiteness” is echoed by George, who believes that meaningful, sustained culture change requires addressing systemic issues constitutive of the military as an institution. Another way of saying re-education based on critical race theory practices. 

“Meaningful, sustained culture change requires engaging with not only racism, whiteness, and power that manifest in overt individual acts, but with those that are systemic and constitutive of the (Canadian Armed Forces) as an institution. It is imperative to move beyond superficial and performative responses to deeply changing structures and systems,” argues George. 

In another article, Leigh Spanner, a research fellow at the Centre for Social Innovation and Community Engagement in Military Affairs, focuses on military families, claiming they are upheld on principles of “patriarchy” that require reform.

Calls intensify for Canada to list IRGC as terrorist group on PS752 tragedy anniversary

As Canada commemorates the tragic downing of flight PS752, which claimed 176 lives, the solemn ceremony is overshadowed by the federal government’s continued reluctance to designate the primary branch of the Iranian Armed Forces as a terrorist organization.

All passengers and crew on board flight PS752 tragically lost their lives when the Ukraine International Airlines jetliner was shot down by Iranian officials in January 2020, just after taking off from Tehran. The tragedy, which resulted in the loss of 176 lives, including 55 Canadian citizens and 30 permanent residents, has reignited criticism of the Liberal government.

A day before publishing a video highlighting his main concerns on Monday, Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre posted to X, criticizing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for not banning the terrorist organization and “allowing the IRGC to legally recruit, raise money, and plan other violence in our country.” 

“What is wrong with him?” asked Poilievre.

On Monday, Poilievre released the video on X on Monday, emphasizing that Canada must label the IRGC as a terrorist group once and for all. Poilievre challenged Trudeau, raising several questions — all starting with “How could you?” 

“How could you allow the same terrorist group that murdered 55 of our citizens and 30 of our permanent residents to operate legally in Canada? How could you let them recruit and raise funds on Canadian soil? How could you allow 700 agents of the Iranian terrorist regime to live freely here, using the money they stole from the poorest people in the world to terrorize our Jewish and Persian populations, putting all of us at risk? How could you risk all of that to appease this terrorist organization?” asked Poilievre. 

Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly posted to X on Monday, the anniversary of the downing of flight PS752.

“We remember each of them and honour their memories. In their name, we fight for justice from Iran, today and every day,” said Joly.

However, many responses to Joly on X suggested disagreement with the federal government’s efforts, citing their failure to list the IRGC as a terrorist group. 

For example, Rex Glacer, a popular commenter on the platform, replied to Joly.

“You have done nothing but pander to these terrorists, from Tehran to Gaza; no better friend of evil than this Trudeau Liberal Govt,” he said. 

Poilievre was not the only politician to voice concerns. Kevin Vuong, an Independent MP, demanded the Liberal government to list the IRGC as a terrorist organization as well.

“Despite promises to @zarei_arad [the father of a victim on the flight] and the families of the victims, the Trudeau govt still has not listed the #IRGC as a terrorist organization,” said Vuong.

Senator Leo Housakos from Quebec also expressed concerns with Trudeau on X.

“Justin Trudeau promised accountability and to this day … nothing. He refuses to even list IRGC as a terrorist entity,” said Housakos. 

The pain and unresolved grief of the victims’ families were echoed in the words of Sarah Raviani, an Iranian-American human rights advocate. She said that the victims of Canada included 29 children, 53 university students, four newlywed couples, and eight entire families. 

“Western governments, including Canada, bear a responsibility to hold Khamenei’s [Iran’s supreme leader] regime accountable for its heinous crimes,” she said

On Monday, Trudeau is scheduled to be joined by Joly, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland, Transport Minister Pablo Rogriguez, and others for a ceremony at Richmond Hill. The ceremony will feature speeches, performances, and special presentations. 

Other events commemorating the tragedy are occurring globally on Monday, following commemorations that were held in various cities—such as Toronto, Montreal, Paris, Berlin, and others—on Sunday.

The Friday before the anniversary, Public Safety Minister Dominic Leblanc said that he had asked the national security agencies to continue to advise the government on possible future terrorist group listings. 

“When we have more to say on a particular change in posture, we’ll have something to say at that point,” he said. 

LEVY: Political fecklessness on antisemitism putting police in tough spot

Since the atrocities of Oct. 7, it’s been a rough couple of months for the Toronto Jewish community.

The past few weeks have been particularly frightening with the plethora of hateful, threatening protests in public and private spaces.

We saw police officers standing idly by as a mob of masked pro-Palestinian protesters harassed Christmas shoppers on Dec. 18 and a balaclava-clad man threatened someone in the crowd to put him “six feet under.”

The verbally violent protesters, not content to harass shoppers, have set up shop for several weekends on the overpass to Hwy 401 from Avenue Rd., right in the heart of the Jewish community.

The police, instead of informing them they are trespassing and forcing them to leave, have shut down the access to and from the highway at Avenue Rd. and let them continue their hateful diatribe.

After weeks of this – which has followed the targeting of Jewish businesses and disgusting online hate –Toronto’s Jewish community has had enough.

A petition has been launched to pressure Mayor Olivia Chow and the police chief to “enforce” the regulations set by council to deal with hate activities in the city.

Chow has been in way over her head from the get-go and, in her socialist fantasy to be friends with everyone, has enabled this hate to continue.

She continues to talk about Islamophobia even though the Toronto police’s own statistics – released in late December – show that antisemitic incidents are up 211% since Oct. 7 and represent 53% of all hate crimes that have been reported since the Israeli-Hamas conflict commenced.

The police have shown that Jew hatred outnumbers anti-Muslim incidents 3-1.

I might also note that police are dealing with a large number of “defund the police” types on Toronto council who are watching and waiting for them to do even one thing wrong.

Quite frankly, most politicians at all levels – Premier Doug Ford and his Jewish solicitor general Michael Kerzner in particular – have been long on talk and short on actions.

Toronto police are in a sense caught between a rock and a hard place, forced to walk a fine line because of our spineless politicians and our bleeding heart judges.

That said, videos of them standing idly by as the haters become more and more aggressive or even worse, delivering Tim Horton’s coffee and doughnuts to the protesters Saturday afternoon can’t help raise the ire of my community.

The optics are terrible, especially the coffee delivery and no matter, how well-intentioned, was not a bright move.

It makes most in my community think the police only serve to enable the antisemitic hatred.

Having said that, I spoke with Toronto police sources in the past few days, who assured me the police are concerned and “committed” and that Jewish community is physically safe.

An inside source, who preferred not to be named, recognized that they have indeed taken a beating on social media and the onlines videos have made them look “ineffective.”

He agreed that the coffee delivery was very bad optics.

He also indicated the situation at the Eaton Centre incident could have been better handled.

However, given that only seven police officers attended the scene – where there were a couple hundred protesters – they had to make a decision whether or not to use force and risk having a full-out riot.

The source added that the gentleman who received the threat didn’t want to lodge a complaint. Still the officers on the scene could have gotten names in an effort to identify the man who made the threat, something they are trying to do now.

“It’s still an active investigation,” he said.

The source added that they didn’t have the full support of Cadillac Fairview at the time to issue trespass orders but that the CEOs of Cadillac Fairview and Brookfield have since given the police authority to enforce the Trespass to Property Act and to initiate a shutdown of their malls, if things get unsafe.

He says they’re also asking mall management and other big properties to post clear signage that a baklava or keffiyeh is a disguise and not something permitted on their property.

“It will strengthen our ability to have some meaningful consequences,” he said.

The police source feels it is meaningless to give protesters at the Avenue Rd. a ticket for a bylaw infraction.

Mischief charges are a criminal offence and in my view, if convicted someone charged will at least have a criminal record.

Something is better than nothing.

Instead he believes the province needs to step up its game to make the hate crime laws less vague and more effective.

Hate crimes need to be an “indictable offence,” he says.

Right now, he said, police have to get consent from the attorney general to charge someone with a hate crime.

Most Crowns or lawyers don’t want the police to lay a charge “if they can’t prosecute or win,” he says. 

“Let’s update the hate laws…at least give us the ability to act on (instances of hate) and then litigate,” he said.

The source says the recent fire at the IDF delicatessen was a “flashpoint and turning point” for police and they’re working full-time on it.

But as the source says, and I agree, the people in power either “capitulate or won’t take a side.”

The police, unfortunately, are caught in the middle.

“It’s frustrating but we’re committed even though our resources are stretched to make sure we’re on top of this,” he said. 

“We don’t take the foot off the pedal.”

The Andrew Lawton Show | Toronto police apologize for serving coffee to anti-Israel protesters

The same Toronto Police Service whose horses trampled an Indigenous woman during the Freedom Convoy protests saw some of its officers serving coffee to anti-Israel protesters who blocked a bridge in a Jewish neighbourhood on the weekend. Toronto police chief Myron Demkiw has apologized and launched a “thorough review” of the day’s events. True North’s Andrew Lawton says the police have clearly picked a side, which should make Toronto Jews very nervous. He discusses with lawyer Ari Goldkind.

Also, the federal government has spent nearly half a million dollars on awards ceremonies for its own employees over the last 10 years. The Canadian Taxpayers Federation’s Kris Sims joins with the latest.

Plus, True North is returning to Davos – not as Klaus Schwab’s invited guests, but as journalists. Except the World Economic Forum has barred us from getting into any of the official venues. Andrew explains why it isn’t going to stop him or his colleagues.

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SHEPHERD: Everything wrong with Elizabeth May’s tone-deaf remarks about Canada’s “cheap” housing

When I watched Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre’s documentary “Housing Hell,” I considered it misguided because it completely avoided the topic of immigration. How can a film about Canada’s housing affordability crisis not address how the influx of over one million new residents a year affects supply and demand?

Green party leader Elizabeth May, however, said that Poilievre’s documentary is flawed because Canada actually has the “cheapest” places to live in North America. 

“Memo to Pierre Poilievre –  you need to re-do your housing hell video in light of Economist magazine finding that the most livable and cheapest cities in North America are in Canada!” May posted on X, adding the hashtag, “#FactsMatter.”

University of Calgary economics professor Trevor Tombe noted that the study May was citing, the Economist Intelligence Unit’s Worldwide Cost of Living Index, “does not include home prices, mortgage payments, or even rent… It is a useful survey, but not for housing.”

Another social media user pointed out that in the report, “the cost of living is just indexed to New York at 100. This doesn’t say they’re affordable. Just that, for example, Vancouver is somewhere between 70-80% as expensive as the economic capital of the world.”

The Economist’s North America data exclude Mexico.

Some might get on board with May’s message and list off a few towns in Manitoba and Saskatchewan that are still affordable. But the Economist article May linked to only references Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, and Montreal (under the subheading “For living on the cheap, go to Canada”). And besides, as people have pointed out time and time again, Canada’s affordable small towns generally lack employment opportunities.

Elizabeth May, and those similar to her, think that because they have high salaries, benefits, gold-plated pensions, and real estate, everything is dandy.

May lives in seaside Sidney, B.C., where the median house sale price in December 2023 was $953,500. May claims that she rents her Sidney home, but considers it her “permanent residence.” 

Her husband also owns a commercial farm in British Columbia’s Interior, as well as a condo in Vancouver from which the couple derives rental income. The average condo in Vancouver costs $801,000, as of last month. The average two-bedroom rental in Vancouver is $3,800 a month, according to Rentals.ca.

I was born in Victoria and raised in Metro Vancouver. It is sad when you are priced out of the place you grew up and where your family is based. It is also sad to realize that while you grew up playing in downstairs rec rooms – where you had the space to be loud and active with your friends away from adult supervision – your kids’ only play space will be in a bedroom that they have to share with their sibling in a cramped apartment.

According to Habitat for Humanity research, half of Canadians are spending 50% or more of their household income on housing costs. Among Canadians aged 18-34, those spending 50% or more of their household income on housing costs rises to 64%.

Imagine trying to save a down payment when your rent eats up more than half of your monthly pay, and you still need to pay for groceries, gas, cell phone service, childcare, and the like.

Data from 2022 showed that the standard Canadian house was almost twice as expensive as an American one – the average price for a home was CAD$816,720 in Canada and CAD$480,168 in the U.S.

And a 2022 report from Generation Squeeze found it takes 22 years of full-time work for the typical young Ontarian to save a 20% down payment on an average priced ($900,000) home in the province. According to the organization, it only took baby boomers five years to save an equivalent down payment back in the day.

#FactsMatter – right, Elizabeth May?

The Daily Brief | Canadians will pay more for phone plans in 2024

Canadians with Rogers and Bell wireless phone plans are gifted this new year with a rate hike despite the Trudeau government’s promise to lower rates in 2019.

Plus, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has had enough with federal environment minister Steven Guilbeault.

And a True North exclusive reveals Canada’s foreign policy is of little significance to the Middle East, according to a new Israeli survey.

Tune into The Daily Brief with Cosmin Dzsurdzsa and Lindsay Shepherd!

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