Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

‘Duty to democracy’: Kansas newspaper files lawsuit after police raided the newsroom – Yahoo! Voices

The owner of a Kansas newspaper outlines a litany of violations in a 100-plus page federal lawsuit claiming a police raid at the newsroom was an intolerable violation of their constitutional rights.

Its the fourth legal action taken in the wake of the Aug. 11 raid at The Marion County Record, which drew condemnation from around the world.

Police also executed search warrants at the home of Joan Meyer and her son Eric Meyer, who own the newspaper, and former City Councilwoman Ruth Herbel.

The suit was brought to deter the next crazed cop from threatening democracy the way Chief (Gideon) Cody did when he hauled away the newspapers computers and its reporters cell phones in an ill-fated attempt to silence the press.

The Record had been investigating Codys previous tenure with the Kansas City Police Department. He resigned from the agency while under investigation for allegedly making sexist comments to a female officer.

Cody, the City of Marion, former Mayor David Mayfield, Acting Police Chief Zach Hudlin, the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Marion, Sheriff Jeff Soyez and detective Aaron Christner are listed as defendants in the lawsuit.

They did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The raids were carried out under the pretense that a reporter had illegally obtained information about the DUI conviction of local restaurateur Kari Newell. That information was later confirmed by the Kansas Department of Revenue to be open to the public.

According to Eric Meyer, the raid was also conducted to settle personal scores. The newspaper had a turbulent relationship with Cody as well as Mayfield and Soyez, he said.

In a statement Meyer said, the true plaintiff is American democracy.

The last thing we want is to bankrupt the city or county, but we have a duty to democracy and to countless news organizations and citizens nationwide to challenge such malicious and wanton violations of the First and Fourth Amendments and federal laws limiting newsroom searches.

The 127-page lawsuit was filed by attorney Bernie Rhodes, who has represented The Star in past litigation.

Rhodes said he expected additional claims, including wrongful death, to be added to the lawsuit.

During the raid, Joan Meyer told the police officers at her home, Whats going on is illegal as hell.

She also told them, Boy, are you going to be in trouble.

The 98 year old died the next day after suffering a heart attack.

My job is to make sure Joans promise is kept, Rhodes said.

The lawsuit seeks more than $10 million in damages. Eric Meyer said any punitive damages will be donated to community projects and causes that support freedom.

In early August, Eric Meyer notified police that he was concerned information reporter Phyllis Zorn had received from a source about Newells DUI conviction had been obtained illegally. He also wanted to know why authorities allowed Newell to drive even though she did not have a valid license.

Cody told Newell that a reporter had stolen her identity in order to access her drivers license record, the lawsuit said.

Police began investigating The Record.

Christner drafted the search warrant application for the newsroom and Cody submitted it to Judge Laura Viar. The documents contained false statements, the lawsuit said, about the Kansas Drivers License Status Check tool, which is a public website.

Had Chief Cody been truthful, the affidavits would have failed to state even arguable probable cause, the lawsuit said.

The lawsuit also said Soyez reminded Cody that Eric Meyer worked from home and a search warrant for the residence was added.

During the raid, the lawsuit alleges Cody yanked a reporters cell phone from her hand, injuring her. The officers were also supposed to conduct a preview search on electronic devices to identify information related to the alleged identity theft.

But the lawsuit alleges officers conducted a sham search with overly broad keyword searches that turned up irrelevant hits, including information about a haunted hotel in Arkansas and a drive-in showing of the movie Finding Dory. Then the officers abandoned the preview searches because they were taking too long.

During the search, Cody called Soyez and is heard saying, Alright, well just take them all.

According to the lawsuit, police seized cell phones from reporters even though preview searches were not carried out.

Also during the search, Hudlin located a file in a reporters desk and alerted Cody.

On a body camera recording, Cody said, Hmm ... keeping a personal file on me.

Later, the lawsuit said, Cody could not recall the wording when he attempted to give Zorn her Miranda warning.

During the search at the Meyers home, Joan Meyers was visibly upset and told officers, If I have a heart attack and die, its going to be your fault.

Hudlin thought about arresting her for interference, but didnt.

The lawsuit also said Cody and Christner drafted probable cause affidavits to arrest Eric Meyer, Zorn and Herbel four days after the raid.

The search warrants were withdrawn the next day by the county attorney.

The lawsuit goes on to allege that Cody asked Newell to delete text messages with him.

If attorneys or kbi go digging and see I deleted the texts as you asked me to, will I get in trouble? the lawsuit said Newell asked Cody.

The lawsuit lists violations against the First and Fourth Amendments in addition to the Privacy Protection Act, which protects reporters materials from seizure; the Kansas Open Records Act; and alleges the city and county failed to train, supervise and have proper policies.

Cody resigned in October. Hudlin was then named interim police chief.

The Kansas Bureau of Investigation launched an investigation. Documents showed that the KBI had knowledge of Codys investigation of The Record prior to the search warrants. The investigation was later handed over to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation.

Two of The Records reporters and the papers office manager have also filed lawsuits.

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'Duty to democracy': Kansas newspaper files lawsuit after police raided the newsroom - Yahoo! Voices

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Bitcoin Magazine Partners with the CIA to Export Democracy Around the World – Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin Magazine Partners with the CIA to Export Democracy Around the World  Bitcoin Magazine

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Bitcoin Magazine Partners with the CIA to Export Democracy Around the World - Bitcoin Magazine

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Will RFK Jr. and Other Third-Party Candidates Help Doom Democracy? Mother Jones – Mother Jones

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In the summer of 2000, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a scion of the Democratic Party dynasty, took time out of his schedule as an environmental attorney to write an op-ed for the New York Times. In the piece, Kennedy hailed consumer advocate Ralph Nader as his friend and hero, but he lambasted him for mounting a third-party run for president. Nader could siphon votes from Vice President Al Gore, who was running against Texas Gov. George W. Bush, Kennedy warned, saying it was irresponsible for Nader to argue that there was little distinction between the Democratic and Republican nominees. A vote for Nader, Kennedy asserted, is a vote for Mr. Bush and for what he considered a disaster: the Republicans anti-environment agenda.

That was then.

Twenty-four years later, now an anti-vaxxer and conspiracy theorist, Kennedy has broken with the Democratic Party and is running for president as an independent. He insists that unlike Nader, hes no spoiler, and he dismisses the notion that his presence in the race will help either former President Donald Trump or President Joe Biden. Political analysts are uncertain which candidate will benefit more from Kennedys campaign. The Kennedy brand could hold appeal for some Democrats, but his paranoia-drenched attacks on the public health community could also be catnip for Trump voters. I think Americans should have a choice, Kennedy told NBC News, that they shouldnt be forced to choose the least of two evils.

Democratic and Republican political pros have good cause to be jittery about how third-party or independent presidential candidates might impact this race. The reason is simple: The last two elections have been decided by extremely narrow margins in a tiny number of states. The odds are strong that this years contest will be similarly close. If so, theres potential for one or more of the third-party or independent contenders already in the raceKennedy, Green Party leader Jill Stein, or author and professor Cornel Westto influence the outcome by drawing a small slice of voters from Biden or Trump. Given the circumstances, it is far easier to view these outside presidential bids as potential threats to a major candidate rather than as well-intentioned movements to expand the horizons of American politics. That is especially true considering that an outsider campaign can be weaponized by other political players pursuing quite different agendas than those of the third-party candidates themselves. With the 2024 election shaping up to be a referendum on American democracy, a minor candidate might end up helping to determine the future of the republic.

For decades, voices across the political spectrum have railed against the party duopoly. Occasionally, a serious independent or third-party presidential candidate has emerged, but none have won a presidential contestor even come remotely close. Only a few insurgents have significantly shaped the final outcome. Notably, Theodore Roosevelts post-presidency run in 1912 under the banner of the Progressive Party (a.k.a. the Bull Moose Party) essentially doomed the reelection campaign of Republican President William Howard Taft and helped New Jersey Gov. Woodrow Wilson, a Democrat, win the White House.

Other third-party presidential candidates have fared worse but still gained notoriety and attention for their ideological agendas. Socialist Eugene Debs was on the ballot in five presidential races between 1900 and 1920. (During his last bid, he ran while imprisoned after being convicted of sedition for urging resistance to the military draft.) Progressive Wisconsin Gov. Robert La Follette sought the presidency in 1924. South Carolinas white-supremacist governor, Strom Thurmond, was the candidate for the States Rights Democratic Party (otherwise known as the Dixiecrats) in 1948. Twenty years later, Alabama Gov. George Wallace campaigned as the head of the pro-segregationist American Independent Party. Businessman Ross Perots independent 1992 bid drew 19 percent of the votethe best outing by an outside-the-system candidate since Roosevelt. To this day, political scientists argue about whether Perot pickpocketed more votes from Bill Clinton or George H.W. Bush.

The Nader effect was clearer. In 2000, running on the Green Party ticket, he pulled in 22,198 votes in New Hampshire, more than three times the 7,211 vote lead George W. Bush had over Gore. In Florida, where Bush edged out Gore by 537 votes, Nader bagged 97,488. While impossible to prove, it is a reasonable hypothesis that had Nader not been on the ballot, Gore, a noted environmentalist, would have picked up enough of those Nader votes to win. (Also complicating that election was ultra-conservative commentator Pat Buchanans Reform Party; his vote total in Florida was boosted by a poorly designed ballot in Palm Beach County that likely cost Gore more than 2,000 votes.)Had Gore triumphed in 2000, you can imagine the United States taking vigorous steps to address climate changewhich President George W. Bush did notand avoiding the catastrophic invasion of Iraq that yielded the deaths of more than 4,000 American troops and more than 200,000 Iraqi civilians. In 2000, RFK Jr. was right.

During the 2016 showdown between former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Trump, Green Party candidate Jill Stein bagged 1 percent of the national vote, and Libertarian Party candidate Gary Johnson collected 3.3 percent. In key swing states such as Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Florida, these candidates combined vote totals exceeded the marginby which Trump beat Clinton. Theres no telling how many of the Stein and Johnson voters would have pulled the lever for Clinton had those other choices not been available. Stein justified her campaign by arguing Clinton and Trump were equivalent: We have two ways to commit suicide here, she said, and I say no thank you to them both.

The years since then have demonstrated just how stark the differences between those two candidates really were. The list of consequences of that election result is long and includes the overturning of Roe v. Wade and Trump inciting a mob to lay siege to the Capitol in an attempt to illegally remain in office.

The stakes are even higher this year, and outsider candidates may be better positioned to affect the outcome. Third-party and independent presidential candidates could play a more significant role in 2024 than in most presidential elections in recent memory, says Bernard Tamas, a political science professor at Valdosta State University and the author of The Demise and Rebirth of American Third Parties. He explains that the growth of third parties over the last 60 years is the result of the rising contentiousness of a steadily more polarized conflict between the two major parties. During the 2024 election cycle, the mutual hostility has escalated to the point where each party accuses the other of subverting democracy. The result? This combination of high public dissatisfaction with well-known candidates could fuel a significant increase in the protest vote against both Biden and Trump, Tamas says.

Understandably, then, the prospect of third-party spoilage is a source of dread for political strategists. For much of the past year, Democrats and never-Trumpers fretted over No Labels, a dark-money group that used millions of dollars raised from anonymous sources to win spots on state ballots for a supposed centrist, bipartisan ticket. (Mother Jones and other news organizations have revealed some of its funders; as a group, they tilt toward the GOP.) Founded by former Democratic fundraiser Nancy Jacobsonher husband is Mark Penn (once a top strategist for President Bill Clinton), who advised Trump during his first impeachmentthe No Labels project was generally seen by political insiders as unlikely to succeed in running a viable candidate and widely regarded as being more beneficial for Trump than for Biden.

Democrats and other anti-Trumpers who considered No Labels something of a pro-Trump front took steps to neutralize this venture, decrying the group, challenging its petition drives, and putting pressure on prospective donors. In response, No Labels called on the Justice Department to investigate its opponents for trying to prevent it from obtaining ballot access. Meanwhile, Sen. Joe Manchin, a conservative Democrat from West Virginia and the potential No Labels candidate mentioned most often, eventually withdrew from consideration, noting that he did not want to help Trump win. That left the group with no obvious standard-bearer and the lingering question of whether it would field a surprise candidate or fizzle.

A less-organized and less-funded third-party endeavor still could throw sand into the gears this year and alter the course of the race. Once again, Stein is seeking the presidency as a Green Party candidate. (She skipped the 2020 election. Howie Hawkins, a longtime progressive activist and trade unionist, garnered a measly 0.3 percent of the vote for the Greens.) Theres no reason to believe Steins appeal has widened since 2016, but the Green Party does have ballot lines in at least 20 states and Washington, DC, including the swing states of Michigan, Wisconsin, and Florida. So she could be a factor in a tight race.

As could Cornel West. The celebrity academic (formerly of Harvard and Princeton), fiery anti-racism campaigner, and onetime leader of Democratic Socialists of America has mounted a long-shot bid as an independent. In January, he announced he also was forming the Justice for All Party to help him gain ballot access in several states, particularly Florida, Washington, and North Carolinathe last of which could be a key BidenTrump battleground. (In some states, its easier for a party than a nonaffiliated candidate to win a line on the ballot, which partly explains Wests desire to form a party.) As of February, he had only qualified to be on the ballots of Oregon, South Carolina, and Alaska. His success in Alaska illustrates the strange-bedfellows world of third-party politics. His campaign paid $10,000 to Scott Kohlhaas, a state ballot access expert who has run and lost races for the US Senate and the Alaska legislature as a Libertarian Party candidate. Kohlhaas also has spearheaded an effort for Alaska to secede from the United States.

Per usual, the national Libertarian Party plans to have a candidate in the 2024 hunt. The partys past efforts have been uneven. In 2016, the Libertarian ticket of former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson and former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld appeared on the ballots in all 50 states, but the partys nominee in 2020 is now a trivia question for politicos (A: Jo Jorgensen). At the end of May, upward of 1,000 delegates will gather for aconvention to choose to choose the partys candidate. Kennedy has held talks with Libertarians about possibly heading their ticket, though there were wide ideological differences between his crazy-quilt collection of policy stances and the Libertarians anti-government positions.

It is Kennedy who may well be the true X factor in 2024, even if its unclear which candidate his presence could hurt more. When Donald Trump Jr. slammed Kennedy as a radical liberal, it suggested that the Trump camp feared his impact on the contest.

The Democratic National Committee is also worried. In February, it filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission charging that a super-PAC supporting Kennedy (which has received millions of dollars from a Trump funder) and his campaign had illegally coordinated their workan allegation Kennedys campaign denied. The DNC also hired a veteran political operative to lead its opposition to third-party presidential bids, with Kennedy as a top concern.

Third-party and independent candidates always talk about the legitimate need to enlarge the political debate. But they also present the major parties, billionaires, and even foreign governments with opportunities for political mischief.

In 2000, a Republican group aired ads featuring Nader attacking Gore. Four years later, when Nader ran again and drew less support, conservative outfits helped him win ballot access, and Republican funders donated directly to his campaign. This was before Citizens United v. FEC, the 2010 Supreme Court decision that allowed unlimited amounts of anonymous money from billionaires, corporations, and unions to pour into the political system. The profusion of dark money makes it easier for political conniversdomestic and foreignto secretly influence elections, including by using third-party or independent candidates for their own ends.

These days, there are many ways to exploit such a candidate. Heres a possible scenario: West makes it onto the ballot in North Carolina. Then, in the closing days of the campaign, a Republican donoror several donorssets up a private corporation, which doesnt have to reveal its owners. This entity pours a large amount of cash into a newly created super-PAC. This super-PAC then uses those funds to air ads on radio stations in, say, Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro, and Durham that slam Biden for not doing enough for Black voters and urge a vote for West. Could that cause several thousand voters to defect from Biden to West? Could a difference of several thousand votes decide the election in that state? Could the results in North Carolina swing the entire election? Sneaky moves like this could be attempted in any swing state.

Nor should we forget the history of Russian interference in our elections. In 2016, Russian trolls ran a social media blitz to boost Stein, as part of Moscows clandestine scheme to undermine the US presidential election and help Trump. This operation included the hack-and-leak operation that targeted Clinton, via the release of emails and documents stolen from the Democrats, and, no doubt, contributed to her loss. In 2020, Russian operatives colluded with Rudy Giuliani, Trumps personal lawyer, to spread false information about Joe Biden and his son Hunters activities in Ukraine.

This year, Moscow will undoubtedly try to intervene in the American election. Third-party and independent candidateswho, of course, have the right to run and be considered on their meritsoffer the Russians and other bad-faith actors avenues for meddling. These schemers can exploit attempts to expand democracy in order to undercut it.

Americans drawn to a third-party or independent candidate might have all sorts of worthy reasons for doing so. Some may see their vote as a blow against the duopoly, while others view it as a means to embrace a purer ideological agenda. Voting for an outsider candidate could be perceived as a way to express a particular frustration with a major-party candidatesay, with Bidens approach to the IsraelHamas war. A lifelong Republican who is fed up with a corrupt would-be autocrat who encouraged an insurrection might want an alternative that does not entail marking the ballot for a Democrat. Yet, given the hard-and-fast realities of Americas political systemand the ability of political operatives, big-money donors, and foreign governments to utilize these candidacies for their own purposesa vote for one of these candidates could lead to results on Election Day and beyond that run counter to third-party voters aims for the nation.

It is inconceivable that a candidate whos not a Democrat or a Republican could win the 2024 presidential contest. But it is not inconceivable that one or more of these outsider candidates could change the course of the election and determine the victorin other words, be a spoiler. This will likely be a contest that hinges on a small number of swing voters in a handful of states. With the scales evenly balanced, it might not take much to tip them. And if the main choice is indeed between a candidate who threatens democracy and one who abides by its rules and norms, these other presidential wannabesand their votersmay play a crucial role in deciding the fate of the United States.

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‘Our democracy is at stake’: Biden weighs in on the 2024 election – MSNBC

'Our democracy is at stake': Biden weighs in on the 2024 election  MSNBC

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'Our democracy is at stake': Biden weighs in on the 2024 election - MSNBC

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India slams U.S. and Germany over Kejriwal arrest criticism – The Washington Post

NEW DELHI After the Indian government last week arrested opposition leader Arvind Kejriwal in a case of alleged corruption just weeks before a national election, U.S. and German officials issued public statements gently reminding India about the importance of the rule of law.

The response from New Delhi was anything but gentle. Instead, it reflected the tough new brand of diplomacy embraced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and cheered by his nationalist supporters.

The Indian Foreign Ministry immediately summoned German and U.S. diplomats for a dressing-down in New Delhi. It lashed out at Washington for casting aspersions and making completely unacceptable comments about Indias internal affairs after the State Department reiterated its concerns about Kejriwals arrest and the freezing of an opposition partys campaign funds.

On Thursday, Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar raised a complaint frequently heard among Modis supporters: that the United States is moralizing, overbearing and prone to interfering.

There are people in the world who want to lecture us on our judicial behavior, Dhankhar told the American Bar Association at a conference in New Delhi. Dhankhar went on to dismiss U.S. officials recent comments about a controversial new Indian citizenship law as ignorant.

We are not a nation to get scriptures from others, Dhankhar said. We are a nation with a civilizational ethos of more than 5,000 years.

The shift in tone is one facet of Indias changing face as it grows into global power under Modi. While the Biden administration has assiduously wooed the Indian prime minister as a geopolitical partner and invested heavily in deepening technology cooperation with the worlds fifth-largest economy, it has been met with a Modi government that pushes back with a prickliness that has drawn occasional comparisons to Chinas Wolf Warriors or officials from other, more adversarial nations.

This seems to be a trend the last few years with the foreign minister very vocally articulating a sense that India will also push back unlike in the past, when India would absorb some of these challenges, said Harsh V. Pant, vice president of studies and foreign policy at the Observer Research Foundation, a think tank that has ties with the Indian Foreign Ministry. This is a more self-assured government that says, Look, were doing well, were coming back to power, were very comfortable politically, and we represent a wide swath of opinion that wants us to reflect that confidence.

While analysts and diplomats say the spats are just that verbal clashes that are unlikely to derail the fundamental trajectory of deepening bilateral relations they reflect the many serious differences between the two countries on subjects ranging from Indias relationship with Russia to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Partys treatment of religious minorities and its suppression of political opponents.

This month, Indian Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar, who often goes viral on Indian social media when he delivers one of his trademark ripostes to Western critics, pointedly defended Indias friendship with Russia and accused the West of cherry-picking principles on Ukraine.

Jaishankar and other officials have also hit back at the West for harboring Sikh terrorists following U.S. and Canadian allegations that the Indian government may have been involved in a campaign of targeted killings of Sikhs abroad. After Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau publicly claimed in September that he had credible allegations tying Indian officials to the killing of Sikh separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar on Canadian soil, India responded with fury and then raised the ante by expelling 41 Canadian diplomats.

As a result, Western diplomats in New Delhi often say they struggle to calibrate their messaging with the Indian government, because even mild criticism in public can provoke a verbal lashing from the Hindu nationalist BJP government. In recent weeks, after India passed a law that fast-tracks citizenship for non-Muslims fleeing persecution from Muslim-majority neighbors, U.S. Ambassador Eric Garcetti and other American officials spoke in public about the principle of equal treatment of different religious communities under law drawing condemnation in India. Other U.S. allies chose to deliver their concerns in private.

C. Raja Mohan, a fellow at the Asia Society Policy Institute, said U.S. and Indian leaders were in the midst of reelection campaigns. The U.S. has to do its democracy-promotion bit, and India has to make its sovereignty argument for the home audience, he said. Its theater.

Indeed, the tough diplomatic rhetoric has fit neatly with Modis domestic brand. Backed by a pliant media and a vast social media messaging machine, he has cultivated an image as a leader who is more respected by world powers and more feared by Indias enemies than any Indian before him.

This week, television channels showed footage of U.S. and German diplomats being summoned as anchors explained to their audiences how India used very strong words to reprimand the Americans. You will remember that this did not happen until very recently, noted Sudhir Chaudhury, a prominent personality on the Hindi Aaj Tak channel.

The meeting lasted 40 minutes. Im sure the Indian side had a lot to say, said Palki Sharma, another anchor popular on the Indian right. She added that today, the United States and Germany needed India, and Indias message to both countries is: Stay in your lane.

The BJPs tough diplomacy has also set alight its grass-roots supporters. After the U.S.-India spat exploded on Indian social media, some right-wing accounts dug up information about the Washington-based journalist who had asked the State Department about Kejriwals arrest and began to troll him as an agent backed by George Soros and the Ford Foundation.

Others, like Gujarat-based social media influencer Raushan Sinha, 35, celebrated Indias newfound swagger.

In January, he gained online notoriety by calling the Maldives new pro-China administration a puppet government, feuding with Maldivian ministers on X and leading a call for Indians to boycott the popular holiday destination.

This week, Sinha was again cheering the Modi government. In an X post to his 247,000 followers, Sinha posted a video of a U.S. diplomat being summoned and said, The New India doesnt give a damn about you. He garnered 6,700 retweets.

In a telephone interview, Sinha said that many Indians of his generation support Modi precisely because he fills them with self-confidence and pride.

Under the Modi government in the past 10 years, we have done great work; you can see things improving, so why should we tolerate such stuff? Sinha said. We, India, are not a third-class country. We are as important as you now. So start treating us the same way.

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India slams U.S. and Germany over Kejriwal arrest criticism - The Washington Post

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