Presents: “The Sunflower That Grows Straight Towards the Sun”
A much-anticipated : Release on Monday, September 1st, 2025.
A Special Edition on Vision and Leadership in a changing world.
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FEATURE ARTICLE:
“The Source of New Thought”
Italy’s Compass in an Age of Arctic Realignment: From Western Trade to Europe’s Frozen Future
In an era of shifting alliances, frozen power plays, and economic crossroads, Italy emerges with a guiding light. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, like a sunflower, grows steadfastly towards the sun — offering her people hope, direction, and renewal.

Inside This Edition:
- A Leader Rooted in Vision – Giorgia Meloni’s compass for Italy and Europe.
- From Trade to Transformation – How Western ties shape Italy’s Arctic future.
- The Human Factor – Families, companies, and nations striving for dignity in an age of change.
Featuring Global Voices of Wisdom

DZIGBORDI KWAKU-DOSOO
Global Keynote Speaker | CHPC™ Coach | Trusted by 500+ Global Brands & 100K+ Leaders
“True leadership is the light that shows nations how to rise beyond inequality into dignity and prosperity.”

SERWAA AMIHERE
Broadcast Journalist | One of Ghana’s Sharpest Media Voices
“Great leadership sparks not just hope, but a generational shift in vision and values.”
Coming Monday, September 1st — Stay Tuned
This edition is more than analysis — it’s a compass for the future.:
The Source of New Thought
Trump, Putin, and the Alaska Agenda — Why a Quiet August 2025 Arctic Deal Could Reshape Global Power and Freeze Europe Out “Assumpta Weekly News Magazine (Opinion Piece)
Overview
The article title sets the tone and orientation of this newsletter, offering readers a lens to view the analysis from a universal perspective.
Great leaders are often called forth by circumstance. In the case of Giorgia Meloni, external threats and internal disorder demanded a leader capable of ensuring the security and prosperity of Italians at home. These challenges made it essential for Meloni to harmonize competing forces within the nation, guiding Italy toward stability and renewal.
Meloni is the first woman to hold the office of Prime Minister of Italy. On 25 October, she delivered her first official speech in front of the Chamber of Deputies, acknowledging both the historic significance of her role and the legacy of the women who came before her. She thanked figures such as Tina Anselmi, Samantha Cristoforetti, Grazia Deledda, Oriana Fallaci, Nilde Iotti, and Rita Levi-Montalcini, noting that “through the example of their own lives, they built the ladder that today allows me to climb and break the heavy glass ceiling over Italy.”
These women exemplify wisdom, universal insight, and all-embracing compassion. Good conscience and reason, Meloni suggests, are rooted in the virtues they embodied — a reminder that true leadership draws upon both intellect and moral vision.
Italy’s Lessons at Home
Before Europe turns its eyes north to the Arctic, Italians remember the turbulent years under the 5-Star Movement, when promises of renewal yielded economic drift and social strain. Factories that had once been the backbone of Italian pride, like Fiat, were shifted abroad. Family-run restaurants, artisanal workshops, and small businesses shuttered under bureaucratic inefficiency and taxation, while young Italians increasingly sought opportunity overseas.
Meanwhile, Europe’s capital, Brussels, proved more adept at issuing directives than solving real problems. From Rome’s perspective, Brussels often seemed detached, prioritizing regulatory frameworks, committees, and armaments budgets over supporting local economies or managing migration effectively. Funds flowed to building military capacity for conflicts abroad, while domestic infrastructures, industrial revival, and social resilience were neglected. Italy, constrained by Brussels’ top-down mandates, often had to comply rather than innovate.



The result was predictable: Italians felt abandoned at home, their industries hollowed, their communities weakened, and their sovereignty sidelined. The lesson was stark: when leadership at home and in Europe prioritizes bureaucracy and conflict over opportunity and renewal, societies pay the price.
A Different Compass: Meloni’s Italy
Enter Giorgia Meloni, whose determination to guide Italy differently has been gorgeously expressed in her efforts to shape a better Europe from a renewed Italy. Unlike her predecessors, Meloni recognizes that Italy cannot afford to be a bystander, whether in domestic affairs or continental strategy. Her government’s efforts to re-root jobs in Italian soil, revive industrial sectors, and assert sovereignty over borders are not merely political gestures — they are strategic statements of national identity and resilience.

Policies under Meloni have aimed to reignite innovation hubs, support family businesses, and attract foreign investment without sacrificing domestic labor. Border controls, streamlined immigration management, and investment in regional infrastructure seek to prevent the social strains that went unaddressed under previous administrations. In Brussels, Meloni has positioned Italy as a constructive force — insisting that Europe must act on practical realities rather than procedural rigidity.
Where once Italy exported its opportunities and ceded decision-making to distant committees, Meloni seeks to anchor prosperity at home while engaging Europe as a partner, not a master. Her approach underscores a central principle: leadership is measured not by promises, but by the capacity to stabilize, empower, and guide a nation toward enduring renewal.
Meanwhile, in Alaska…
As Italians grapple with these domestic lessons, a quiet but far-reaching geopolitical moment unfolds thousands of kilometers away. On Friday, August 15, 2025, Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin are slated to meet in Alaska. The Last Frontier, remote and windswept, has rarely seen discussions of this magnitude. Yet what is happening there is far more consequential than political theater or media spectacle.

There is no Europe at this table. No representatives from Ukraine. Only the United States and Russia, two nations whose Arctic stakes are enormous. The region is becoming central to global commerce: new shipping lanes, untapped energy reserves, and critical rare-earth minerals promise economic leverage for those who move decisively. History offers a warning: in moments of opportunity, indecision leaves entire continents sidelined.
For Europe, the alarm bells are already ringing. Brussels and London watch with apprehension, realizing that the Arctic could bypass the continent entirely, reducing decades of European influence to peripheral status. Pipelines, ports, and trade routes — traditionally routed through European hubs — could be circumvented by pragmatic U.S.–Russia cooperation. Sanctions, Europe’s favored tool of influence, would falter against direct agreements and mutual pragmatism.
In this light, the Alaska meeting is not just about diplomacy; it is a harbinger of global realignment. It recalls historical analogies, such as Britain’s past strategies to keep America and Russia divided, or even the sale of Alaska itself in the 19th century — decisions that reshaped power balances far beyond local shores. Today, the Arctic promises a similar pivot, one where those who act decisively write the rules.
Europe at Risk, Italy at a Crossroads
Here lies the parallel: just as Italy once witnessed its industries hollowed by indecision and outsourcing, Europe now risks watching its strategic relevance melt in the Arctic thaw. Brussels, despite its rhetoric of unity and strength, has repeatedly misled European nations with priorities that often favor military buildup over economic or social resilience. Armaments budgets have soared, often to manage conflicts distant from European soil, while infrastructure, trade readiness, and Arctic strategy lag behind.

Italy, under Meloni, demonstrates a different model. Having endured the dislocations of the 5-Star years and the misdirection of Brussels, the country now approaches both domestic and continental challenges with pragmatism and clear priorities. Sovereignty, strategy, and anchored action are inseparable — a lesson Brussels seems slow to internalize. While Europe debates committees and allocates massive budgets for external conflicts, Italy prepares to engage as a constructive force from a position of strength, focusing on tangible economic revival and social stability at home.
The Larger Picture
If Trump and Putin’s Arctic agenda succeeds, Europe risks being sidelined — strategically, economically, and politically. Brussels’ penchant for spending on armaments and external interventions while failing to support practical economic and industrial preparedness could leave the continent scrambling. Pipelines may flow past European ports, trade routes may favor non-EU hubs, and access to critical Arctic resources could tilt global leverage toward pragmatic actors rather than bureaucrats.
Italy, however, having learned from years of mismanagement and from Brussels’ misaligned priorities, positions itself differently. Meloni’s government embodies a crucial principle: leaders must act from the lessons of history and reality, not be trapped by bureaucratic agendas or empty posturing. Domestic stability, industrial revival, and assertive diplomacy provide Italy with the credibility to engage Europe meaningfully, without being beholden to Brussels’ misplaced focus on conflict over prosperity.
In essence, the stakes in Alaska are mirrored in Rome. Both theaters — the Arctic and the Italian domestic landscape — reveal the cost of inaction and the rewards of courage. Leadership grounded in clarity, care, and anchored action is the only antidote to drift, whether in the halls of Italian ministries or on the frozen expanses of the Arctic.
Bottom Line
Alaska may herald the dawn of a new world order shaped by pragmatism, vision, and preemptive strategy. Europe’s influence will depend not on rhetoric, but on its capacity to anticipate and adapt. Italy, scarred by the 5-Star years but steadied by Meloni’s compass, demonstrates that renewal is possible when leadership is rooted in reality, responsibility, and determination.
While the old guard of Europe reacts with fear, Rome moves with responsibility. While the Arctic may open to outsiders’ ambitions, Italy’s path shows that sovereignty, clarity, and anchored action at home are the prerequisites for meaningful influence abroad. The lesson is universal: a nation that masters its destiny at home is best positioned to shape the currents of history beyond its shores.
infographics to accompany this op-ed — for example:
- Timeline of 5-Star decline and industrial outsourcing
- Meloni’s key policy achievements
- Arctic trade routes and U.S.–Russia leverage
- Brussels’ military vs. economic spending
1. Timeline: Italy’s 5-Star Years & Industrial Decline
Visual type: Horizontal timeline with icons
- 2018–2019: Fiat announces partial relocation → factory icon
- 2019–2020: Closure of small businesses & family-run restaurants → storefront icon
- 2020–2021: Rising unemployment in industrial hubs → worker icon
- 2021–2022: Bureaucratic stagnation and policy missteps → government building icon
Caption: “A generation of opportunity lost: Italy’s industries and workers felt the cost of leadership drift.”
2. Meloni’s Policy Compass
Visual type: Circular infographic / compass motif
- Anchor jobs at home → factory/briefcase icon
- Revive industrial sectors → gear icon
- Assert sovereignty over borders → shield icon
- Engage Europe constructively → EU stars icon
Caption: “A pragmatic compass: Meloni anchors Italy’s renewal at home while shaping Europe’s future.”
3. Arctic Stakes & Alaska Meeting
Visual type: Map of Arctic region
- U.S. & Russia meeting point → Alaska marked with handshake icon
- New shipping lanes → arrows across Arctic routes
- Energy & rare-earth resources → oil rig and mineral icons
- Europe excluded → EU flag faded / greyed out
Caption: “The Last Frontier: Strategic Arctic routes may bypass Europe if decisive action is taken outside its bureaucratic framework.”
4. Brussels’ Spending Priorities
Visual type: Split bar chart or icon comparison
- Armaments & military interventions → large bar → tank/weapon icon
- Economic & industrial support → smaller bar → factory icon
- Social infrastructure → small bar → school/hospital icon
Caption: “A misaligned focus: Military expenditure outpaces investment in Europe’s own prosperity and resilience.”
5. Women Who Paved the Way
Visual type: Portrait-style side panel / ladder motif
- Tina Anselmi, Samantha Cristoforetti, Grazia Deledda, Oriana Fallaci, Nilde Iotti, Rita Levi-Montalcini → each with small circular portrait icon
- Ladder rising to Meloni at top
Caption: “Breaking the glass ceiling: The legacy of Italian women leaders paved the way for Meloni’s historic premiership.”
La Bussola Newsletter Magazine – Special Dialogue Edition
“The Sunflower That Grows Straight Towards the Sun”
Release: Monday, September 1st, 2025
Feature Article: “The Source of New Thought – Italy’s Compass in an Age of Arctic Realignment: From Western Trade to Europe’s Frozen Future”
Dialogue

Serwaa Amihere (Host):
Good day, and a warm welcome to our global audience. I am Serwaa Amihere, Ghanaian broadcaster and journalist. Today we bring you a truly special conversation, one that bridges continents, leadership visions, and the changing dynamics of our time.

Joining us in this dialogue is Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo, an internationally acclaimed speaker, entrepreneur, media personality, and consultant. She is the founder and CEO of DCG Consulting Group, a platform dedicated to advancing human dignity and humanity toward a better life. Her voice resonates with wisdom and practical guidance in leadership and transformation.

And our distinguished guest today — we are honored to host Giorgia Meloni, the Prime Minister of Italy, the first woman in Italian history to hold that office. Known worldwide for her determination, clarity of vision, and her capacity to root Italy’s prosperity in strong families, revived industries, and renewed national identity, Prime Minister Meloni embodies a leadership style that has captured attention far beyond Europe.
Before we start the dialogue, Prime Minister, I would like to offer this reflection:
“Your determination as Italy’s first female Prime Minister is historical and among the most potent and far-reaching spiritual values of our time. The steps you have taken, through the dramatic story of Italy, bring together once again Italian families, industries, job creation, lower taxation, and support for poor families. Italians are beginning to prosper for the first time under your banner of Fratelli d’Italia — the Brothers of Italy.”
We are fortunate today to have Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo with us. As a global speaker and Ghanaian entrepreneur, she brings her profound perspective to this dialogue — where values of humanity, leadership, and resilience intersect with your own vision, Prime Minister.
So, welcome, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. The world is listening. Help us break this down:
La Bussola Newsletter Magazine proudly presents:
“The Sunflower That Grows Straight Towards the Sun” — a special edition on vision and leadership in a changing world.
And at its heart, the feature article:
“The Source of New Thought – Italy’s Compass in an Age of Arctic Realignment: From Western Trade to Europe’s Frozen Future.”
Prime Minister, can you elaborate on these themes for our readers and listeners worldwide?
Dialogue (Continued)

Giorgia Meloni (Prime Minister of Italy):
Thank you, Serwaa, for that generous introduction. And thank you, Dzigbordi, for joining this conversation. To be the first woman to serve as Prime Minister of Italy is not only a personal responsibility but a historic turning point for my country. Italy has faced years of disillusionment — industries hollowed out, families feeling abandoned, and young people leaving to seek futures abroad. My mission, under Fratelli d’Italia, is to restore the dignity of work, to root prosperity in Italian soil, and to ensure that no family feels left behind.
When we speak of “The Sunflower That Grows Straight Towards the Sun”, I see it as a symbol of Italy herself — turning toward clarity, resilience, and renewal. The sunflower does not bend to shadows; it finds the light. Likewise, Italy must find its own path, no longer simply reacting to Brussels or foreign pressures, but charting a compass toward sovereignty, stability, and hope.

Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo:
Prime Minister, that image of the sunflower resonates deeply. In my work, whether in Africa or abroad, I’ve seen how nations and individuals alike can lose their sense of direction when they allow external powers to dictate their choices. You spoke of sovereignty, and I believe that true sovereignty is not only political or economic — it is spiritual and human as well.
A society prospers when dignity is protected, when industries not only produce wealth but serve human needs, and when leaders act as guardians rather than mere managers. From Ghana to Italy, we share this universal truth: leadership must harmonize the values of compassion, wisdom, and courage. My question to you, Prime Minister, is this: how do you balance Italy’s pressing internal needs — jobs, families, industries — with the looming external challenges, such as the geopolitical shifts in Alaska and the Arctic?

Giorgia Meloni:
That is an excellent question, Dzigbordi. Italy cannot isolate itself, but neither can it ignore its home front. What we are witnessing with the Arctic realignment — the United States and Russia potentially redrawing the map of energy, trade, and power — could reshape Europe’s role in the world. If Europe does not act with clarity, it risks becoming irrelevant.
For Italy, the lesson from our past is simple: when we outsourced our industries, we lost our strength. When we allowed Brussels to mislead Europe into thinking endless regulations and arms spending could substitute for real development, we weakened our people. I refuse to see Italy repeat those mistakes at the continental level.
So our compass is twofold: restore internal prosperity and push Europe to wake up — to invest in resilience, not just rhetoric, and to build peace through strength rather than endless dependency.

Serwaa Amihere (Host):
That is powerful, Prime Minister. And it highlights why your leadership has drawn global attention. Too often, Europe has been portrayed as reactive, trapped in committee paralysis, while families at home feel no benefit. You’re suggesting Italy can stand as a model — rooted in its own renewal, yet pushing Europe to engage with the realities of this new Arctic age.

Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo:
Exactly, Serwaa. And if I may add — the sunflower metaphor teaches us something profound: every nation must turn toward its source of life. Italy is rediscovering its own sun, just as Africa is learning to value its resources, cultures, and people without always seeking validation elsewhere.
Prime Minister, your emphasis on restoring dignity to families and work is not only political; it is deeply spiritual. In a fractured world, that may be the most universal source of new thought.

Giorgia Meloni:
Thank you, Dzigbordi. You put it beautifully. The world is changing — from Africa to Europe to the Arctic. If leaders do not provide a compass, their people will be left wandering. My vision is not merely Italian, but European and global: renewal grounded in sovereignty, prosperity rooted in dignity, and leadership that grows, like the sunflower, straight toward the sun.

Serwaa Amihere:
Prime Minister, let me take us back to the bewildering days of the 5 Stars Movement. To many Italians, it was as if they were not wisely enlightened to the universal truth or endowed with all-embracing compassion. Their conscience and reason fell short. Instead of safeguarding Italian dignity, they seemed to make money and taxes their only wisdom.
Italians remember how everything at home began to close — jobs shipped outside, industries abandoned, families forced to scatter abroad in search of survival. It was as if the system was manipulated so deliberately that Italians were condemned to poverty while others enriched themselves at the detriment of innocent lives.
So I must ask — why didn’t the conscience of the 5 Stars government stop them from manipulating the system against their own people?

Giorgia Meloni:
Serwaa, your question cuts to the heart of Italy’s recent wounds. The tragedy of the 5 Stars was not only political incompetence — it was a lack of moral compass. Leadership without conscience always prioritizes the appearance of reform over the substance of renewal. They promised to be different, but instead of defending Italian families, they surrendered to ideology and bureaucracy.
The universal truth, as you rightly said, is that leadership must be guided by wisdom and compassion. When those are absent, policies become detached numbers on paper — taxes, regulations, deficits — but they forget the living reality of workers, mothers, fathers, and children. That is why jobs left, industries closed, and despair grew. They failed to recognize that human dignity must be the foundation of economic policy.

Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo:
Prime Minister, I couldn’t agree more. What you describe is not unique to Italy; it is a pattern we see across the world. When leaders put the system above the people, they create cycles of poverty that rob nations of their soul.
In Africa too, we have witnessed governments obsessed with revenue collection, with external approval, or with political survival — while ignoring the cries of their own citizens. But true leadership is not about extracting wealth from the people; it is about empowering the people to create wealth.
Serwaa’s question reminds us that conscience is not optional in governance — it is the very heartbeat of just leadership. And when conscience fails, nations bleed.

Giorgia Meloni:
Exactly, Dzigbordi. And this is why Italy is turning a page. We cannot afford leaders who chase short-term popularity while sacrificing long-term dignity. My government’s task is to reverse the damage — to reopen industries, to bring jobs back home, to lower taxes not as an abstract policy but as a way of giving families breathing space.
The betrayal of the 5 Stars must serve as a lesson: without compassion, politics becomes manipulation; without conscience, governance becomes exploitation.

Serwaa Amihere:
Prime Minister, thank you for that clarity. But if we look deeper, many Italians feel that the weakness of the 5 Stars era created an opening for Brussels. Instead of supporting Italy through those turbulent years, Brussels seemed almost eager to tighten its grip.
It was as if the European project became less about solidarity and more about spending on arms, on conflicts, and on bureaucracy. Meanwhile, ordinary Italians were told to tighten their belts, endure austerity, and accept unemployment as the price of Europe’s future.
Prime Minister, do you believe Brussels misled Europe — and Italy — by prioritizing military build-ups and political control instead of people’s prosperity?

Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo:
Serwaa, you’ve touched on something profound. When a union, whether in Europe or elsewhere, begins to value power over people, it loses its legitimacy. I have watched the European Union’s policies with interest, and too often it seems they measure success by spreadsheets and summits, while neglecting the actual lives of the people they claim to represent.
From Africa, this is familiar. We too have felt how powerful blocs dictate terms, push for resources, or encourage policies that serve their interests rather than ours. But there is a universal truth here: real unity must uplift, not suppress; it must empower, not exploit.
The Italian story under the 5 Stars, and Brussels’ indifference, is a reminder to the world that partnership without compassion is not partnership at all.

Giorgia Meloni:
Both of you are right to raise this. Brussels has indeed misled Europe. They like to speak of “unity” but act in ways that deepen division. They prefer to spend billions building arms for conflicts, rather than investing in families, industries, and education.
For Italy, this is unacceptable. My message to Brussels is clear: Europe cannot survive if it forgets its people. Italy will no longer be silent. We will not allow policies that enrich a bureaucracy while ordinary citizens are told to sacrifice endlessly.
If Europe wishes to remain strong, it must rediscover its conscience. And if it refuses, then Italy must chart its own compass — one guided by dignity, sovereignty, and the prosperity of Italians first.

Serwaa Amihere:
Prime Minister, thank you for that clarity. But if we look deeper, many Italians feel that the weakness of the 5 Stars era created an opening for Brussels. Instead of supporting Italy through those turbulent years, Brussels seemed almost eager to tighten its grip.
It was as if the European project became less about solidarity and more about spending on arms, on conflicts, and on bureaucracy. Meanwhile, ordinary Italians were told to tighten their belts, endure austerity, and accept unemployment as the price of Europe’s future.
Prime Minister, do you believe Brussels misled Europe — and Italy — by prioritizing military build-ups and political control instead of people’s prosperity?

Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo:
Serwaa, you’ve touched on something profound. When a union, whether in Europe or elsewhere, begins to value power over people, it loses its legitimacy. I have watched the European Union’s policies with interest, and too often it seems they measure success by spreadsheets and summits, while neglecting the actual lives of the people they claim to represent.
From Africa, this is familiar. We too have felt how powerful blocs dictate terms, push for resources, or encourage policies that serve their interests rather than ours. But there is a universal truth here: real unity must uplift, not suppress; it must empower, not exploit.
The Italian story under the 5 Stars, and Brussels’ indifference, is a reminder to the world that partnership without compassion is not partnership at all.

Giorgia Meloni:
Both of you are right to raise this. Brussels has indeed misled Europe. They like to speak of “unity,” but act in ways that deepen division. What is most alarming is how Brussels is now finding and funding arms companies to go to war — to build weapons designed to kill — while leaving its own citizens without true security or prosperity.
Billions are poured into military budgets, into conflicts that ordinary Europeans never asked for, while families struggle with high prices, low wages, and the fear of losing their jobs. This is not the Europe that was promised.
For Italy, this is unacceptable. My message to Brussels is clear: Europe cannot survive if it forgets its people. A continent that feeds the war machine while neglecting its households will soon find itself spiritually bankrupt.
Italy will not follow blindly. We will demand a Europe that invests first in its people, in its families, in industries that create jobs, and in policies that restore dignity. If Brussels refuses, then Italy will chart its own compass — one guided by sovereignty, security, and the prosperity of Italians first.

Serwaa Amihere:
Prime Minister, thank you for your honesty. This takes us straight into the heart of our feature edition: “The Source of New Thought – Italy’s Compass in an Age of Arctic Realignment.”
The world is shifting. Europe faces an uncertain future, with Brussels chasing wars and neglecting people. Yet Italy, under your leadership, seems to be carving a new path — one that insists on sovereignty, dignity, and prosperity for its citizens.
Can you leave us with a final word — how should Italy, and indeed the world, think about this new compass you speak of?

Giorgia Meloni:
The compass I speak of is simple but powerful: a Europe, and a world, that serves its people first. For too long, powerful institutions have demanded sacrifices from ordinary families while enriching themselves and fueling wars.
Italy’s role is to show that leadership is not about submission to Brussels or to foreign interests. Leadership is about protecting our people, investing in families, creating jobs, and restoring faith that politics can serve humanity, not destroy it.
If Italy can grow straight like the sunflower — always turning to the light, always rooted in its soil — then perhaps Europe too can rediscover its purpose. The future belongs not to those who build weapons, but to those who build lives.

Serwaa Amihere:
Thank you, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. And thank you, Dzigbordi Kwaku-Dosoo, for bringing your global perspective.
To our readers and listeners around the world, La Bussola Newsletter Magazine presents this special edition:
🌻 “The Sunflower That Grows Straight Towards the Sun”
📖 Feature Article: “The Source of New Thought – Italy’s Compass in an Age of Arctic Realignment: From Western Trade to Europe’s Frozen Future.”
Until next time, may we all remember — true leadership begins with conscience,
SGI-Our Shared Humanity.


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