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Data
Analysis Reveals Consumers Are Paying Down, While the Federal Government
Is Piling Up, Unprecedented Rates of Debt; Massive Tax Increases Loom
by
Bill Sardi
Recently
by Bill Sardi: The
Flu Vaccine Horror Story You Never Heard About
Data gleaned
from governmental agencies reveals consumers are beginning to reduce
their personal debts while the rate of debt growth by the federal
government in the past two years is 37 times greater than
in prior years in this decade.
While the annual
rate of debt growth for consumer debt rose by around 10–11% at the
beginning of the decade, it came to a halt in 2008 and declined
in 2009. Meanwhile, the rate of debt growth by the federal government,
which ranged from 3.9 to 10.9 percent per year from 2002 to 2007,
rose to 24.2% in 2008 and 28.2% in 2009.
A data review
also reveals that:
- For the
first time since 1930 the rate of growth of the gross domestic
product, everything produced by all the people and all the companies
in the U.S., has almost come to a complete stop in 2009.
- The federal
government provides a rosier picture of the current economic meltdown,
choosing to portray it as a brief recession rather than the complete
and prolonged collapse of modern banking and currency systems
that it is. There is no technological breakthrough that would
give reason for high rates of unemployment to drop, nor is there
any meaningful reform of financial systems and institutions to
prevent a repeat of the recent economic bubble that created false
prosperity throughout the nation. Any stimulus programs appear
to be fleeting attempts to temporarily cover for major economic
problems that demand true reform.
- The growth
in federal debt will peak in 2009 and begin to be reduced thereafter,
according to projections by the Office of Management & Budget
(OMB), but this debt reduction reflects higher tax revenues rather
than any cutbacks in government spending. While the OMB predicts
a $192 billion decline in individual federal income tax revenues
between 2008 and 2009, it inexplicably projects individual tax
revenues will rise from less than $1 trillion in 2009 to $1.6
trillion in 2014, which foretells huge increases in federal income
tax rates rather than any rise in employment, wages or increases
in exports or consumer spending.
- While total
federal debt increases over the next half-decade, it falsely appears
to drop by nearly $400 billion in 2010, as federal spending declines
in the aftermath of the bank bailout/Fannie Mae-FreddieMac/ troubled
asset relief program. Federal debt still is at unprecedented levels
in upcoming years. Furthermore, the OMB figures don’t add up correctly.
The OMB estimates the gap between Federal revenues and federal
government spending will be $535 billion in 2014. (See chart below.)
But using OMBs own figures, by 2014 there is a huge gap between
individual income taxes collected ($1.612 trillion) and federal
outlays ($4.016 trillion). Taxes on corporations will make up
for some of that gap ($420 billion), but that leaves a spending/tax
revenue gap of $1.984 trillion in 2014! Taxes would need to be
nearly doubled to eliminate debt financing of federal spending
in 2014.
- The federal
government gets into onerous debt when it passes legislation that
requires funding without any source of revenue. The gap between
revenues and spending is then closed by obtaining loans, which
becomes the national (collective) debt. The President recently
urged Congress to refrain from passing any future legislation
that requires spending that isn’t offset by cuts in federal spending.
The week following the President’s appeal for budget-neutral legislation,
the Executive Branch proposed a massive health insurance reform
plan that widened the gap between federal revenues versus spending
by more than $1 trillion. This gap was to be reduced by taxing
health benefits provided by employers and by increased taxes upon
wealthy Americans.
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ECONOMIC
STATISTICS: PAST OR PROJECTED PERFORMANCE
Sources:
Office of Management & Budget, Federal Reserve and
Congressional Budget Office
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2002
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2003
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2004
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2005
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2006
|
2007
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2008
|
2009
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2010
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2011
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2012
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2013
|
2014
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GROSS
DOMESTIC PRODUCT – In Trillions of Dollars
(Source: Office Management & Budget)
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10.48
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10.96
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11.69
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12.42
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13.18
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13.81
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14.27
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14.16
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14.57
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15.14
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15.97
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16.80
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17.49
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GROSS
DOMESTIC PRODUCT – Percent growth or decline
(Source: Office Management & Budget)
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3.4%
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4.7%
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6.6%
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6.3%
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6.1%
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4.8%
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3.3%
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0.7%
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2.9%
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4.0%
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5.4%
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5.2%
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4.1%
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INDIVIDUAL
INCOME TAX – In Billions of Dollars (Source: Office
Management & Budget)
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858
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793
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808
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927
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1.043
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1,163
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1,145
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953
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1,051
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1,211
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1,381
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1,500
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1,612
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FEDERAL
OUTLAYS – In Trillions of Dollars (Source:
Office Management & Budget)
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2.011
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2.160
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2.293
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2.472
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2.655
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2.729
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2.983
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3.998
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3.591
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3.615
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3.633
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3.817
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4.016
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SURPLUS
OR DEFICIT – In Billions of Dollars (Source: Office
Management & Budget)
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157
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377
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412
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318
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248
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160
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458
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1,841
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1,258
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929
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557
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512
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535
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DEBT
GROWTH – HOME MORTGAGE – Percent growth or decline
(Source: The Federal Reserve)
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7.3%
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8.1%
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8.9%
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9.5%
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9.0%
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8.7%
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6.0%
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4.9%*
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--
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--
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--
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--
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--
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DEBT
GROWTH – CONSUMER CREDIT – Percent growth or decline
(Source: The Federal Reserve)
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10.8%
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11.6%
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11.1%
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11.1%
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10.0%
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6.6%
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0.3%
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1.7%*
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--
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--
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--
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--
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--
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DEBT
GROWTH – FEDERAL GOVERNMENT – Percent growth or decline
(Source: The Federal Reserve)
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7.6%
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10.9%
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9.0%
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7.0%
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3.9%
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4.9%
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24.2%
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28.2%*
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--
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--
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--
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--
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--
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NET
INTEREST PAYMENT ON DEBT – In Billions of Dollars
(Source: Office Management & Budget)
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170
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153
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160
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183
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226
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237
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252
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142
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135
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254
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348
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411
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460
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UNEMPLOYMENT
RATE (See Congressional Budget Office data
projections)
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5.8%
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6.0%
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5.5%
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5.1%
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4.6%
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4.6%
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5.8%
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9.3%
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10.2%
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9.1%
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7.2%
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5.6%
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4.9%
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* 2nd
Quarter 2009 data
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The reaction
of the federal government to a downturn in the economy has been
to spend wildly almost as if there were no consequences. Interest
on the National Debt will rise from $142 billion 2009 to $460 billion
in 2014.
An article
in the
New York Times reveals interest payments on the current
$12 trillion of accumulated national debt will exceed $700 billion
a year in 2019, up from $202 billion in 2009. As the New York
Times article points out, an additional $500 billion a year
in interest expense would total more than the combined 2009 federal
budgets for education, energy, homeland security and the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan.

Such massive
debt causes false employment and a false economy. The current downturn
in the economy, as the aftermath of the economic bubble brought
on by cheap money policies at the Federal Reserve Bank and by relaxation
of requirements to qualify for a home loan, now challenges every
level of American society as to how to pay interest on its crushing
debt.
The federal
government is adding to the collective debt of Americans at a time
when incomes are plunging and unemployment is rising. It is unlikely
the principal on the national debt will ever be paid down given
derelict spending now underway.
The US
Debt Clock tells all, in real time. The Debt Clock shows that
the US, with 108 million taxpayers out of a population of 307 million,
with 43 million workers who pay zero income tax, and with 21 million
US workers being on the public dole as federal, state or local employees,
and nearly 16 million unemployed chasing about 2 million available
job openings, this leaves less than 100 million taxpayers to shoulder
the nation’s bills.
The National
Debt now adds up to $39,000 per taxpayer and other unfunded liabilities
(Social Security, Medicare and a prescription drug program) amount
to an additional $345,000 of debt per citizen.
Despite denials
by politicians, according to a pie chart issued by the OMB (see
below), more federal revenues will be derived from huge increases
in federal income taxes, while borrowing to make up for the federal
deficit will subside.
This is because
foreign lenders (mainly China and Japan) are reticent to lend America
any more money, fearing the US will default on its loans either
by devaluing the US dollar or by non-payment. In 2009 the gap between
spending and revenues was closed by printing more money, which threatens
to cause inflation. Fortunately, the newly printed money was parked
at US banks and did not enter the economy to fan the flames of inflation.
The US Treasury says it will not print money to make up for spending
gaps next year, which again suggests massive tax increases are inevitable.

Burden the
wealthy
The United
States has chosen to lay the burden for this economic mess upon
upper-income groups. According to the nonpartisan Tax Foundation
in Washington DC, the tax burden upon the top 1% of tax payers now
exceeds that paid by the bottom 95% of taxpayers. (See chart below.)

However, the
Washington DC-based Tax
Foundation reports that even the most onerous tax upon wealthy
Americans cannot possibly close the anticipated deficit for 2010.
According to
Bill Ahern, director of policy and communications at the Tax Foundation,
a 90% federal tax rate on wealthy Americans plus state and local
income taxes and other taxes would well exceed the entire income
for many upper-income households.
There is no
possible way the wealthy can shoulder this debt burden. It will
have to be spread across the income spectrum, raising taxes of joint
filers from 1035 percent to 2795 percent. This essentially
represents a tripling of the federal income tax.
For example,
to balance the 2010 federal budget, a taxpayer paying $7,055 dollars
would have to pay $20,515, and a wealthy American who pays $800,000
in federal taxes would have to pay almost $2 million.
The Tax Foundation
reports that even in 2012, when the President's Budget projects
a lower deficit, tax rates would still be need to be prohibitively
high in order to balance the budget: nearly double, with rates ranging
from 18.7 percent to 74.1 percent.
Whatever consumers
are now saving in trimming their credit card debts and paying down
home mortgages will soon be tapped in increased taxes to make up
for the swelling national debt. The only federal government programs
where budget cuts would make a significant difference in debt reduction
would be Medicare and defense spending, both which are inexplicably
scheduled for expansion.
November
25, 2009
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is a frequent writer on health and political
topics. His health writings can be found at www.naturalhealthlibrarian.com.
He is the author of You
Don’t Have To Be Afraid Of Cancer Anymore.
Copyright
© 2009 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
This article has been written exclusively for www.LewRockwell.com
and other parties who wish to refer to it should link rather than
post at other URLs.
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