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Alexandra McGrorty Public Feed

Globalization in Philadelphia - Alex McGrorty

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Globalization - Laufenberg on Wednesday, June 1, 2011 at 8:51 am
​Here is my globalization benchmark. 

What I found most challenging about this project was actually thinking of images that somehow corresponded to the topics. I honestly had no idea how to photograph things like "gender" or "health" and have them relate to globalization in Philadelphia. It ended up taking me a really long time to figure out what to photograph, never mind writing about what I did. 

I also didn't really have a great camera. For the most part I went around with my phone taking photos. I also took photos with a couple different people (some of whom had better cameras than I did). I also managed to borrow my father's nice camera for a couple of my photos. I selected the images that were the clearest and most relevant to my topic.

My favorite photo is the picture of First Unitarian Church. I managed to actually get a clear picture, using a real camera instead of my phone. I also love the design of the building itself, so I was pretty happy with the result. 

I think the evidence of globalization is pretty prevalent. As I said in my benchmark, Philadelphia is a port city. Thanks to the fact that we've always had a booming trade industry here, we have a rich global culture within the city. It's evidenced in just about every area, people from all over the world have made Philadelphia their home, and left their own cultural impact on the city. I'd say we're one of the most globalized cities in the nation. 
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A Day in the Life - New Zealand

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Globalization - Laufenberg on Friday, May 6, 2011 at 2:44 pm
​I made a timeline showing a day in the life of an average 12 year old girl living in New Zealand.

This isn't very similar to my life when I was 12, but it's not so vastly different that I can't understand it. I've never lived in a coastal area, so right there are some differences, because I would never have had the chance to do many of the activities people in New Zealand can in their free time. I also have always lived in the United States, so some things like free public health care are completely alien to me, but pretty typical for the average New Zealander. 

Many of the things will have stayed the same even at 40 that they were at 12. However, a typical person in New Zealand will have been long out of school by 40, and they will be working instead of going to class. Other than that the health care still applies, as do many of the activities available. 
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Alex McGrorty Benchmark

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Globalization - Laufenberg on Wednesday, March 30, 2011 at 9:17 am
Collapsibility Review 

For my benchmark, I selected two countries from both of my regions. In the first rotation I was in the South American region. In the second I was in the East Asian region. Therefore, I chose Brazil to represent the prior, and South Korea to represent the latter. Both of these nations were very different, and in some respects polar opposites. However, I actually found some surprising similarities. Brazil is still considered a developing nation, however, its economy has recently had a boon, and it is one of the dominant economic nations in South America. This is very different from South Korea, who, during the 1970s and 80s became very quickly and vastly industrialized, leading their closed off economy to open up. Both these nations are also dealing with environmental issues that have been brought on by their growing economic status, and have some similar trade partners. 

My process was fairly simple. I devoted a few days to just researching. I would look for specific articles and media that dealt with all five of the points in the framework. I would just leave a textedit document open, and write down important facts figures and excerpts. When I had enough information, I then wrote about a paragraph for each, keeping a running tally of them all, basically. Originally I was going to make an iWeb, but I was running into problems publishing my site, and I wasn't really happy with the results. Then I decided to make a brochure-style document, so that each of the nations could be directly compared with the other in the same column.

As far as the actual five point framework goes, it was fairly straightforward. All of the components of a collapse have been reviewed in the media for both of these nations, so I just had to find the proper resources to support this. The only confusing thing I found was making a difference between environmental problems/climate change/society's response to environmental problems. All three of these issues kind of go hand in hand, so I felt like I was repeating myself a little when I wrote about each of them. 


If I could change one thing about this product, it would probably just be to give myself more time. From the beginning I had most of my information compiled and I was good on the actual content, but I feel like I didn't leave myself enough time for the actual organization of my info in a creative and aesthetically pleasing way. I'm actually really happy with my result as of right now, but I could probably always make it better in the future. 


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5 Photo Story

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Globalization - Laufenberg on Thursday, March 17, 2011 at 9:44 am
Here is my 5 photo story about South Korea
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...

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in American Government - Laufenberg on Wednesday, March 16, 2011 at 9:15 am
asdf
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Um another story I guess

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Storytelling - Chase on Wednesday, February 23, 2011 at 8:55 am
Saturday night I realized that one of the beads on my nose ring popped off. It was late, so I decided to just put it aside and fix it tomorrow. However, the next morning, the entire ring had fallen out, so I kind of panicked. 

I attempted to put the ring back in myself, but I guess it closed up a little and it hurt, so I decided I didn't want to mess with it and went to the place I got it pierced at originally. 

I decided while I was there I might as well get a bigger ring, because I've wanted a bigger one for ages. 

I didn't realize that meant they would have to stretch my piercing, and I guess I wasn't prepared for it. 

The girl put a taper in my nose and started pushing, I was just sitting there thinking ...this hurts... why does this... the piercing itself didn't even hurt... this hurts WOW THIS HURTS 

I started tearing up, and accidentally said "crying is for the weak" out loud. Now everyone there (well my two friends had come with me) witnessed how badass I am and they can't even deny it. 
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Story... picture... story......

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Storytelling - Chase on Thursday, February 17, 2011 at 8:22 am
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Another Story

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Storytelling - Chase on Wednesday, February 16, 2011 at 9:48 pm
I don't think I have much to write really, so this story will be kind of lame. Anyway, I started my Capstone today which is teaching an 8th grade class about medical history. We started with osteology. I was panicking all week because when I went to introduce myself last week I was pathetic and could barely figure out what to say when put on the spot in front of the class. It kind of discouraged me and made me not want to go back, but I felt like I was too deeply committed to be able to back out of it now. 

However, this class went fantastic. Everything literally fell into place and all the students actually seemed interested, even taking notes and yelling at me if I went too fast for them to write. It was insane and awesome at the same time. 


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25 Word Love Story

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Storytelling - Chase on Monday, February 14, 2011 at 10:17 pm

Happy
Pizza is pretty awesome and brings me joy. I think it’s the only thing I’ll ever actually love. Does this count as a love story?



Not Happy

What’s sad is when you come home and find a pizza box sitting on the table. Then, upon opening, realize it’s empty. My heart breaks.

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250 Word Sentence

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Storytelling - Chase on Thursday, February 10, 2011 at 7:40 pm
I could get all creative with this piece of writing, I suppose, I could add all the flourishes and adjectives and flowing description that would give it more mass and content so I could somehow reach two hundred and fifty words, I could think of some event and describe it down to every last insignificant, tiny, minute detail, I could just keep on finding more and more descriptions to include, abuse the thesaurus to death and do this the proper way that I was told to; however, I find that completely, ridiculously, insanely impossible and I don’t think I can even get past one hundred words, if I can even reach that goal,  I’ll be lucky if I can even make it that far; I know this is supposed to help me structure sentences or purvey thoughts or something good like that, but I don’t see how I can even manage to do it, because I can’t focus on one singular thought, this turned into a giant run-on sentence before I was even past the first line, but I can’t think of much else to put because this is just completely beyond me and using grammar this poor (my own fault, I know it can be accomplished somehow, but I have no idea how to, personally) is really just breaking my heart and depressing me.

 

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iTunes Storytelling (this is my entire day, every day, it's kind of sad)

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Storytelling - Chase on Tuesday, February 8, 2011 at 1:55 pm
​Here comes the sun, I saw a light. Wake up, thirsty and miserable. Dressed up. Finish your collapse and stay for breakfast. Traveling women, we rule the school. Keep the car running, home again. So. Bored. Wrapped up in books. Soul kitchen, eat flesh. TV party, after hours. Just can't go to sleep, I'm just so tired. This night has opened my eyes, new dawn fades. 
Screen shot 2011-02-08 at 3.02.06 PM
Screen shot 2011-02-08 at 3.02.06 PM
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Story Number 1

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Storytelling - Chase on Tuesday, February 8, 2011 at 10:21 am
Ok I feel like a lot of my stories will involve the escapades of my youngest brother, Dalton, and I. He's eight years old, in third grade, the spawn of Satan and Spiderman and my best friend. 

I work at the Mütter Museum, and most weekends I'm there giving tours. Well, last weekend, Dalton decided he wanted to come with me because he loves the museum. This particular time I was giving a tour to a group of adult students. Dalton tagged along for the actual tour rather than wandering the place himself, and he had much of the tour memorized, well, as memorized as his eight year old mind could understand. 

We got to one of his favorite exhibits, the "Megacolon", which is a ridiculously huge distended colon taken from a man who suffered from a condition called Congenital Aganglionic Megacolon, or Hirschsprung's Disease. This is basically a section of colon that has no working nerve endings, causing chronic constipation and an accumulation of waste that cannot be naturally excreted by the body.

 Anyway, I mentioned that the specimen we had on display was a "biological specimen", and that it was the original colon casing and was now stuffed with straw. Dalton had been politely quiet until this point, where he cut in and turned to address the crowd of adults surrounding him. He said, with a perfectly straight face "Yes, it is now full of straw, however, originally, it was full of poo." 

How he managed to say this in such a serious tone with a straight face and not dissolve into laughter, (he is eight after all) is beyond me, but it's just one of many reasons why he's great, and I think he might have to come to more of my tours to add in his own anecdotes. 
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Alex McGrorty Benchmark Quarter 2

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in American Government - Laufenberg on Wednesday, January 19, 2011 at 9:28 am
​To complete my benchmark I had to research all branches of government  and figure out which laws, court cases or bureaucratic functions applied directly to my life. Basically I just thought out all the things I do in a day (it's not much, when I really think about it) and how the government impacts any of these activities. I also scoured through lists of court cases and used the bureaucratic blogs as reference. 

I found this to be an easy process, but a very tedious one. The work itself wasn't hard per se, but it took a lot of research and the ability to just sit down and work through the inner workings of the government. Once I began actually realizing what laws and processes affect me, the overall process was much easier. 

I definitely believe that the government will have a lot of more impact on my life as I get older. Right now I'm on the edge of that threshold, however, I don't do things like pay taxes or try to purchase property. I'm too young to be eligible for a lot of government processes, but they will begin to affect me a lot more as I get older and go through my life. 
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Lobbying Blog - Final Post

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in American Government - Laufenberg on Wednesday, January 12, 2011 at 3:14 pm
​What began as an incentive to stop the product known as Corn Syrup to be renamed as "Corn Sugar" has evolved into a full-on battle to force the food industry to become more honest. 

When the Corn Grower's Association began petitioning the FDA to have the name of the sweetener changed into something more "pleasant" and "natural sounding", it raised alarm among many people. My family were advocates of cutting the sweetener out of diets, so this led me to research the issue. What I soon realized was that this was not just limited to corn syrup itself, but to all edible products used in food production that needed a clear label.  

So, basically my lobbying issue became something more along the lines of "make labels in food more honest and clear", also known as label transparency. There were a couple things I did to garner more interest in my issue. The first step was email my representative, which I did and received no reply. After waiting and continuing to do the other portions of the lobbying project, I realized I needed to be more vocal about my issue. 


So, my next step will be to create an awareness campaign. My partner and are creating physical and plan on posting them in public places, (once the snow lets up a little, that is) possibly encouraging use of companies like 
NeutriSleuth, if only to garner awareness to the issue and attempt to cause the general public to realize there even is a problem, because it is something that can be very easily overlooked. 

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How to File a Restraining/Protection From Abuse Order

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in American Government - Laufenberg on Friday, December 17, 2010 at 12:42 pm

By Alex McGrorty and Matt O'Toole

The bureaucratic task my partner and I chose was the process of filing a Restraining Order, or a Protection from Abuse Order.

The process is fairly straightforward, if somewhat tedious. Basically, to file one of these orders, a person has to go to their local county Court of Common Pleas. Upon arriving there and finding the area where a restraining order can be made, there will be several court forms to fill out, such as the Application for Relief from Abuse, the Affidavit for Relief from Abuse and the Request for Nondisclosure of Location. These each respectively give different aspects of the problem.

The Application for Relief from Abuse is a form where the plaintiff (the victim or person filing the order) writes their basic personal information, such as name, address and contact information.

The Affidavit for Relief from Abuse is a form where the plaintiff details what happened to them or what abuse they suffered to make them file the order.

The Request for Nondisclosure of Location is a form the plaintiff will fill out to keep their location classified, so that their abuser cannot access the information. The victim’s location and contact information will have to be on file in this process, and the file is able to accessed by the public, therefore this document is a safety measure to keep the defendant from being able to access it themselves.

These documents should be given to a court clerk, who will present the case to a judge. There will be a hearing regarding the issue, and if the judge decides the case to be legitimate, they can have the order served. However, this will be temporary and only last until the secondary hearing, which will take place after 14 days.

After the 14 day (2 week) period of deliberation, the plaintiff will be summoned to another hearing, where the judge will determine whether the order needs to last another 180 days.  Any evidence or witnesses should be present during this hearing (there is additional documents and forms to be filled out if there is a witness involved).

If the order is given, the plaintiff must have it served by a State Marshall. The State Marshall will deliver the order to the offender (abuser) and order them to obey the limitations of the order. All involved should obey the restraining order, if there is any unlawful contact between parties, the police should be involved immediately.

If there was one thing we could change, I suppose it would be to lessen the 14-day waiting period. Or possibly eliminate the secondary hearing entirely. While I understand this is a period of deliberation by the court officials, if a person is in serious danger and felt threatened enough to file a restraining/protection from abuse order in the first place, then they should be helped immediately and not have to wait so long.

We believe systems have become more complicated because times have changed. We still use archaic bureaucratic methods, even in the face of modern technology and changing times. We possess the technology that could make the process simpler and more straightforward to meet modern needs. 

Flowchart View Link: http://www.lucidchart.com/documents/view/4d08cde6-8c50-4085-a6b3-1e830af90ae1

 PDF Download Link: http://www.lucidchart.com/publicSegments/view/4d0a2ba5-3d7c-4a7a-8e2f-66ee0afcbe04

RestrainingOrder
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Alexandra McGrorty - Lobbying Blog #4 - Contacting a Representative

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in American Government - Laufenberg on Thursday, December 9, 2010 at 9:13 am

I figured that for this portion of my lobbying process, a direct contact would be most useful.

I went online and looked up the contact information for my representative, Chaka Fattah. 

I called his office and left a message with my contact information, hoping that I would get a reply.

I also looked up his email and sent an email introducing the issue I'm lobbying for.

"Hello,My name is Alexandra McGrorty, I am a Philadelphia high school student attending Science Leadership Academy and a constituent of Pennsylvania’s Second Congressional District. I am contacting you because in my American Government class, I am lobbying an issue that I feel is important. I am trying to garner more support and political backing for my topic, and since you are my Congressional Representative, it seemed logical to contact you.

In the media recently, there has been a lot of attention about the Corn Grower's Association petitioning to have the name "Corn Syrup" changed to "Corn Sugar". While this is seen, by many, as not being much of an issue at all, I find it incredibly wrong. I am lobbying for transparency in food labels. I believe that, as consumers, every citizen should be informed of exactly what they are ingesting, and all products should be clearly labeled. Nothing should be changed, especially not for aesthetic's sake, like in the case of corn syrup. Making products sound healthier without attempting to actually make them healthier just sounds like a lie to me. And I believe that we should be concerned with the health of this city, especially.

According to Temple University's Head Chair of Podiatric Medicine and Orthopedics Kathya Zinszer, “Philadelphia’s rate of diabetes is five times higher than the national average,yet diabetes is one of the least understood chronic diseases." This, along with the obesity rate, are reaching epidemic proportions. If consumers are more well informed as to what exactly they are ingesting, it could act as a preventative measure to stop this serious issue. It could also help reversal efforts. However, if consumers are blindsided and uninformed, it will only make issues even worse. This is why I would like to have your support with this issue.

Thank you for your consideration,

Alexandra McGrorty

Science Leadership Academy "

I'm still waiting for replies from both of these contacts, and I hope that I can get some much needed attention as far as labeling transparency and the FDA regulations, because they directly effect my life and the people in this city. 

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Lobbying Blog Alex McGrorty

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in American Government - Laufenberg on Tuesday, November 23, 2010 at 10:11 am

Lobbying Blog

Entry #2

Who Represents Me?


The Congressman for my area is Chaka Fattah.

Who is he?

A Democrat, representing the 2nd Congressional District of Pennsylvania


The district is pretty expansive, with Fattah representing the majority of Philadelphia


The Second District spans from Wynnefield into West Philadelphia, which includes  Spruce Hill  and University City As well as Center City Philadelphia, and it also includes North and Northwest Philadelphia, the home of East and  West Mt. Airy,  Chestnut Hill,  East Falls, Germantown, Manayunk and Roxborough.


A bit about the man himself


Chaka Fattah is a Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives

He is a Philadelphia native, born November 21, 1956.

He attended the Community College of Philadelphia and went on to earn his MA at Pennsylvania Sate University


Before his election to Congress, Fattah served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives and of the Pennsylvania Senate.


Some of his political views include:

  • Transform America Transaction Fee to bring more funding to schools
  • the clean energy act
  • paperless enrollment for school meals act
  • debt-free America act

While he has not had an opinion on anything directly relating to the FDA and food labeling regulations, he has made his opinions regarding health care issues clear

and they are documented



Lobbying Blog

Entry #3

Researching the Issue


It’s hard to say whether it’s a “good year” for my issue. There has been a lot of publicity over the issue lately


And there’s been an interesting mixture of public outcry against the issue, as well as public support of it. This generally tends to happen when the FDA is petitioned to change the name of a food product.


As far as government legislation goes, several legislative officials are against corn syrup, and believe it to have negative heath risks.


“Calling high-fructose corn syrup the “crack of sweeteners,” Florida state Rep. Juan Zapata wants to ban the state’s school districts from selling or using products containing the sweetener. Zapata, a Republican, is joined in this effort by state Sen. Gwen Margolis, a Democrat. Both maintain that students who consume foods and drinks made with high-fructose corn syrup are more likely to become obese and develop Type-2 diabetes.”


The main opponent in this issue is, of course, the corn growers and corn refiners. Corn, in the United States anyway, is a cash crop. More than is traditionally consumed is grown, leaving a margin for a large profit. There has been a lot of propaganda on both sides of the argument, which has gotten the debate a lot of media attention.




The stakeholders in this issue are just about every American consumer. If the FDA is not going to be clear about food labeling in this country, then it will affect everyone who eats any form of American food. Label transparency is an important issue.


The FDA has a transparency initiative in the works


No local legislature is currently working specifically on the corn syrup v. corn sugar issue, or about the safety or controversy regarding corn syrup. However, several out of state officials are.




Hopefully I can influence anyone who was unaware of this issue specifically, or the issue of food label transparency in general.


As there is no pending legislature regarding this yet, there is no definitive timeline.


Tags: Lobbying, blog, amcgrorty, Laufenberg, government, 2010
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The Volstead Act

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in American Government - Laufenberg on Monday, November 15, 2010 at 10:07 am

The Volstead Act on Prezi

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Have humans managed to accelerate the evolution of a species?

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in Science and Society - Best on Thursday, November 11, 2010 at 9:34 pm
The process of evolution or natural selection takes years naturally, and is carefully fine-tuned and passed down throughout generations. However, humans try to replicate evolutionary process to document how it occurs. They also tend to invade and intrude on the habitats of other species, which can cause organisms to adapt more quickly to survive sudden changes brought on by humanity. Have humans managed to accelerate the evolution of a species?

 In some instances, humans have been known to purposely speed certain controlled processes up enough for them to document them. One of the more famous examples of this was the experiments carried out by Richard Lenski, who has, since 1988, been conducting a long-term evolution experiment using the E.coli bacterium as his subject. However, certain things (e.g. climate change) are accelerated by accident, with alarming and potentially harmful results. 

An example of this accidental acceleration was discussed in a UK Telegraph article titled "Human fishing and hunting accelerating evolution of species". By over harvesting some fish species at their most mature age and level of development, humans are causing certain fish species to change their sizes, and this is at a much more rapid rate than would happen naturally. Dr. Chris Darimont, a post-doctoral researcher in environmental studies at the University of California was quoted as saying "The pace of changes we're seeing supercedes by a long shot what we've observed in natural systems, and even in systems that have been rapidly modified by humans in other way. As predators, humans are a dominant evolutionary force."

overfishing-thousands-of-pounds-of-jack-mackerel-noaa-images

In his book "The Botany of Desire", Michael Pollan discusses the Semper Augustus (a rare and prized tulip) and Dutch "tulipmania" of the 17th century. This was a brief but intense tulip obsession in Amsterdam. It was one of the first instances of humans using natural selection to purposely change the appearance of an organism. A blight had been observed changing the colors of tulip petals, and soon a multicolored tulip became a coveted item. Farmers were introducing this blight to their tulips, which would ultimately kill the crop, but made the flowers beautiful and desired. Tulips were sold for outrageous amounts of money and a full-out craze ensued, until the market for the prized flower collapsed a few years later. 

Semper_Augustus_Tulip_17th_

Mankind has accelerated change in other species and organisms. While they may not have induced complete evolutionary change, they have certainly accelerated the rate of natural selection. This has been done both purposefully, with the intent and purpose of changing features or adding or eliminating different traits, such as with the tulips, or other examples, like dog breeding. This has also been done accidentally, for example some released or escaped pets caused an explosion of Burmese pythons in Florida, which changed biological diversity and natural evolution.  Possibly, sometime in the future, mankind will be able to accelerate actual evolution in its quest to understand nature and have concrete theories.

Tags: Q1 BM, q1, benchmark, evolution, Best, scisocE
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Election Day Questions

Posted by Alexandra McGrorty in American Government - Laufenberg on Thursday, November 4, 2010 at 10:27 am
What motivated you to come out and vote?
I just turned 18, so I never had the opportunity before and wasn't going to pass it up. 

Do you know why we vote on Tuesday? 
Because November 1 is a religious holiday (All Soul's) and because November was after the harvest which was convenient for our previously agrarian country, and Tuesday allowed for adequate travel time. 

Where have you encountered the highest amount of ad campaigning? Radio, TV, Print, other.
TV and radio, definitely. I haven't really received many ads in print, I'm not sure why. I assume my parents are disposing of them before I even see them. 

Are you always sure of who you are going to vote for when you walk into the booth or are you still deliberating? 
I'm fairly certain, but not entirely. 

What impact do you feel that your vote will have on the election? 
Although many say that individual votes don't matter (those buzzkills), I thoroughly believe in the American democratic republic and think that every vote counts, mine included. 


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