It Could Happen Here - The Library Funding Cliff
Episode Date: March 31, 2025James talks to Jamie, a librarian, about the threat of federal funding being withdrawn from libraries and how listeners can help.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Hi, everyone, and welcome to the podcast.
It's just me, James, today, and I'm joined by Jamie,
who is a librarian, and we are here to discuss
the pending federal cuts on library funding
and, I guess, years of attacks on library funding.
So welcome to the show, Jamie.
Thanks for joining us.
Hi, thanks for having me.
Yeah, this is really great for me
because I have been trying to find a librarian
for a very long time to talk to us on the podcast.
I understand that lots of people have been like
really concerned that we covered this,
but also very afraid for their jobs,
which is a rough position to be in.
So thank you for coming on.
I thought we'd start with, like there was an executive order on the 14th of March.
I think it was called something like further something, the federal
bureaucracy cutting, slashing, diminishing, whatever, you know, I don't really care.
One of the outcomes of this was I believe the Trump administration moving
towards a complete closure of IMLS.
Is that right?
So, it depends upon how much Doge and Trump and company are going to listen to Congress,
because Congress has already funded IMLS, which is the Institute of Museum and Library Services,
for this year.
So that money already exists, it's already been allocated.
Yep. for this year. So that money already exists, it's already been allocated. And so in theory, they should be good for at least a year and then next year when the budget comes up,
again, it should be up to Congress because Congress created this institution and Congress funds it.
But the executive order and the commentary on it does say that they would like to dissolve it
kind of as soon as possible, definitely next year. and the commentary on it does say that they would like to dissolve it.
Kind of as soon as possible, definitely next year.
So it's really up in the air about how fast things would move,
what exactly would happen, if it would be this year, if it would be next year,
whether anyone's going to listen to Congress.
Yeah, we will find out, I guess.
So can you explain for listeners who aren't familiar what IMLS is and what it does.
Yeah, so it's, as I said, the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
And so basically they're allocated money by Congress every year, and then they hand it
out to states, especially then who kind of break it down into other grants.
They give grants to states and libraries and institutions for things that museums and libraries do. So that includes things like on the
museum side, maybe you know putting together
programming or doing big digitization projects. I used to
work at an institution where we had a grant that did a lot of
digitization of historic documents. And on the library side, they do all sorts of stuff,
especially for public libraries.
They end up funding things like summer reading programs,
equipment, especially for internet access,
all this stuff related to job training
and those services that libraries offer.
And interlibrary loan is a big one
so that people can access materials
that their library doesn't hold
but is held by other libraries.
And rural libraries and tribal libraries especially really, really benefit from this. so that people can access materials that their library doesn't hold, but is held by other libraries.
And rural libraries and tribal libraries especially really, really benefit from this.
Every single state and territory in the country gets these funds.
Okay, yeah.
I was wondering about who funded interlibrary loans.
So they're the ones who facilitate the transporting of the books?
Yeah, well, depending on your library.
Some libraries will fund it from their operations budget, but especially for small rural or
public libraries where that might be very expensive, that is one
thing that these grants go to is interlibrary loan. Okay, yeah. So there are lots of very important
services. And what would it mean if we didn't have that IMLS budget at all? Like, what would it mean,
especially for, like you said, those kind of libraries that are financially, I guess,
more marginalized in tribal libraries and rural areas and stuff. So I first want to mention that the entire budget
of IMLS for 2024 was something like 266 million dollars. We're not talking about huge sums of
money in terms of the federal government. It comes out to about 75% per person in the country. So
we're not going to be saving on our taxes if this goes away
But that money makes a really big difference
So even smaller states that you know
Maybe have a million people in it might see a couple million dollars of these grants per year
and so what that would mean is that
The things that maybe not all of them, but most of the thing that these grants cover would not be there
So that means that there wouldn't be summer reading in some places. That means that
they wouldn't be able to buy the
hotspots that they lend out to people who don't have internet at home. That means that
maybe there wouldn't be the class that teaches your grandma how to not get caught in a phishing scam.
So all sorts of things, those things just wouldn't be there because there's probably
not, especially in red states, other funds that are going to come to cover that.
Yeah, like I think I was looking online and the budget is something like 0.003% of the
federal budget is going to, it's trivial.
It's so small, right?
You could like take the, I don't know, the gold toilets away from the Navy and cover it in a day, right? Like it's so small, right? Yeah. You could like take the, I don't know, the gold toilets away from the Navy and cover
it in a den, right?
Yeah.
Like it's so small.
Yeah, yeah.
And yet it has this enormous outsized impact.
You know, the statistics say that every dollar spent on IMLS returns $2 to the economy.
So it's actually, if you're going to measure it that way, highly beneficial, especially
to these more marginalized areas.
Yeah, maybe we should talk about that because I think if people like maybe they just don't happen to go to the library,
maybe they don't, you know, realize they have services they need or maybe they don't live in the US.
The library is not just a place where you can go and borrow the books, right?
Like, can you explain some of the services that libraries provide?
Like you mentioned some, but they really help people.
Yeah, so in, for better or for worse, public libraries in the United States have become
the social safety net of last resort, because they already exist almost everywhere, and
it's so hard to get, you know, not right now, but even in the past couple decades, other
social programs started in many parts of the US that
things kind of just get lumped into the libraries. Now you get your tax forms there, maybe they have
a social worker on staff, it's the place that homeless folks can sit when it's snowing.
Yeah.
So that kind of is like a little bit aside from what we're talking about right here, but I really
do want to point out that public libraries have become the social safety net in many, many places.
have become the social safety net in many, many places. So that aside, offerings of aside from books and other media,
including e-books, audio books, movies in lots of formats,
magazines, newspapers, there are tons of classes
about all sorts of things, especially technology classes.
It's a place that a lot of people,
it's their only reliable internet access. So, you know, in 2025 you can't do mostly anything without the
internet. You can't get a job without the internet. You can't maybe pay your bills
without the internet. So that's a reliable place that people who don't
have internet for various reasons, maybe they live so far out in the country that
just doesn't go there unless you have satellite, right? Even now. Or maybe you
can't afford it or whatever.
Or there's one computer in your house and there's six kids and someone has to do their
homework so what's everyone else going to do?
So then the computers themselves.
And then also the other thing that IMLS also does is those grants will sometimes purchase
research databases.
So if kids especially are trying to do their homework, again, like children's and teens
programming is another thing between homework help, social things,
clubs. So in a lot of places where there's not much going on, it's one of
the places where young people can go in the afternoon or on the weekend and not
be getting in trouble either because they're making trouble or the adults
think they are because there's somewhere productive to be. There's somewhere
that's inside supervised or something to do and so
That's the kind of stuff we talk about in normal times when we're trying to fight for like weekend service or later hours
But if we're looking at it in in the lens of IMLS
The building might be open maybe because maybe they have the foundational operationals, but it but then there won't be these programs
There won't be these resources. There'll just be a bunch of books on the shelves.
Yeah.
It's like, I don't know.
I'm amazed how many of my friends and neighbors don't understand how
much the library does like I'm forever like San Diego or housing prices are
ridiculous and no one seems to want them to not be ridiculous, um, lots of us too.
But we don't get to choose.
And so like we have a large unhoused population.
I'm always like, uh, helping my in-house population. I'm always like
helping my in-house neighbors go to the library, like giving them a ride or whatever so they can
get, like you say, access internet services.
Apply for benefits. Yeah.
Or just like sit and read the paper and know what's going on in the world.
Yeah. And like not get harassed by the cops just for existing.
Which is the rest of their existence here, sadly. Yeah. These are massively important.
I think most people like, no one, like, there's not really a big like
fuck the libraries movement, you know, like I think people.
I mean, these things are.
Yeah.
I guess, yeah, I guess there's a whole like, uh, people should only read stories
if they conform to certain gender stereotypes.
Yeah.
Fuck those people.
Um, talking of fuck those people. Absolutely fuck those people.
Talking of fuck those people, we unfortunately have to pivot to ads.
So here are some unfortunate advertisements.
Hey kids, it's me, Kevin Smith.
And it's me, Harley Quinn Smith.
That's my daughter, man, who my wife has always said is just a beardless, d***less version
of me.
And that's the name of our podcast, Beardless D***less Me.
I'm the old one.
I'm the young one.
And every week we try to make each other laugh really hard.
Sounds innocent, doesn't it?
A lot of cussing, a lot of bad language.
It's for adults only.
Or listen to it with your kid.
It could be a family show.
We're not quite sure.
We're still figuring it out.
It's a work in progress.
Listen to Beardless D***less Me on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your
podcast.
On November 5th, 2018 at 6.33 AM, a red Volkswagen Golf was found abandoned in a ditch out in
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All right, we're back. Talking to people I dislike, San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria, who was elected in 2020 and then
re-elected shamefully this year, which is very disappointing.
One of his first actions was to propose a budget which increased the funding to the
police, surprise, and decrease the funding to the libraries that would lead to them closing
for an extra day.
This is our quote unquote progressive mayor,
you know, has been anything but.
But this isn't a particularly uncommon scenario, right?
I've spoken since then to librarians around the country
who for the last at least half decade
have faced funding cuts.
Can you explain like,
why doesn't the state see value
in these services?
I mean, I don't want you to speak for the Democrats
defunding the libraries to give the cops more money.
But can you explain why there has been this ongoing assault
on library budgets?
So you're talking about the last decade to half decade.
I think we can really trace it back much farther,
at least 30 years to the Clinton administration, actually.
I want to talk about the Democrats.
But even the roots farther back than that,
because we have a neoliberal problem, right?
So it's basically the idea that all activity should generate
obvious immediate monetary profit,
that everything should be run by a business,
that everything should be subject to the market,
quote unquote.
And so that's where we are with libraries,
is that even though I can sit here and say,
every dollar that the IMLS spends generates $2
of economic activity, that somehow isn't even good enough.
Because when the powers that be look at libraries,
they just see money being flushed down the toilet,
and that's the only way they can measure anything.
So if you look at it and you're just saying, well this is a place we spend money, this doesn't create
money, this doesn't make more money happen. The idea that everything should be
run by a business and everything should be subject to market logics,
that would say, well if we're going to subject everything to market
logics, libraries have no value because we're only measuring it in can this make
the balance sheet, can this make number go up?
Yeah.
And even though libraries do make number go up,
it's not obvious, you can't make it obvious.
There's no direct line between what libraries do
and number go up, even though there actually is,
for example, with IMLS.
So, you know, starting during the Clinton administration,
when the federal government
changed and how the federal government worked changed very much under the guise of increasing
service quality. What they actually did was lay off a quarter million workers and, you
know, turn everything into contract work instead of regular labor. And that, I think, filtered down from the federal level into states and
municipalities so that those levels of government, too, also started to look at how they ran
their government things. And in many places, public libraries are arms of local government.
That those, too, should also be run like a business and be subject to market logics.
And therefore, number does not go up, we don't value this.
And that's basically it, is that, you know,
it's hard now that we've had 30 years of overt neoliberalism
in our government system, and a couple decades more
of less obvious versions of it,
to make government, which is now being run like a business, even in
the best of times, value things that aren't valued strictly monetarily. So there's no cultural value
and even if the monetary value isn't extremely obvious, it somehow doesn't count.
Yeah, I guess it kind of, I used to lecture, I still do lecture at university actually,
starting again next month, but like, we pivoted towards like, everything
has to be STEM in education, generally, because that'll make
money or something.
Yeah, I don't know why. Because like Bill Gates make the line go
up. And yeah, we lost so much that has not just intangible
bounty, like you say, but actual tangible value, very, very
obvious value. But nonetheless, like, like you say, it's not
easy to put on a graph.
So it disappears.
Right.
And then, you know, even though cops also don't make money in a direct sense, somehow
we can still fund that.
So it really shows that, like, in the case of where you are, the carceral solution is
now the only solution we have.
And when we sit here as abolitionists and we say, well, let's get rid of all that stuff
and people say, well, what's get rid of all that stuff and people say well
What are you going to do instead? Our answer is often it would be so different that it wouldn't be necessary
So we'd have prevention of the entire situation
That's one of the things that libraries offer is prevention of the entire situation
making vast laws of the carceral state unnecessary
So there's a conscious choice there
especially when money is being taken out of the balance sheets of a city government from the libraries and
put into the cops, of this carceral choice of saying we'd rather everyone
life is shit so we can throw them in jail, then everyone have a nice life and
no one would have to go to jail. Yeah and then they can come read a book instead
and yeah it would be nice. It reminds me of one of the big projects of the
anarchists in Spain in the 1930s was to create popular education centers, which included libraries, right? And they funded these entirely,
they were not funded by the state. The state was not interested in making libraries in
the 1920s, 1930s in Spain. And they funded them from popular subscription and from people's
union dues. And they built these ateneos, which are now really beautiful places. So it was one of the places I did my, my PhD in Barcelona.
And like, I wonder if there is, I guess it's, it's very hard for us to conceive
of like a library without the state in the United States, right?
Like, and it like rich people putting little libraries in their middle
class neighborhoods is not, not the same thing as much as they'd like to think.
Think it is like, yeah, your little phone
box library is not replacing these services. Is there a model for recreating this in a
way that isn't reliant on the state, which seems increasingly hostile to it?
I think there's a couple models, and it depends upon how far down the revelation you go. So
the example you gave of Spain, we have contemporary with that and slightly more recent versions of that in the US.
So the Workmen's Circle, now the Workers' Circle, they funded really wonderful cultural programs, including libraries.
Unions often had libraries, especially back when they used to have more buildings.
Like my union, I'm part of my union.
And aside from just like being where I work, we don't necessarily have a building per se. So those things have always existed,
especially in the workman circle,
in ethnic communities who were trying to preserve a culture.
And that's something that fit into 20th century capitalism.
And so if we go farther than the revolution,
I read a really great pamphlet recently,
from the 70s actually, that was from the UK,
and it kind of discussed libraries, if we make it through the revolution a little bit
as being operated as under a syndicalist model yeah where workers and patrons
which is what we call them now there wouldn't be quite quite that split then
yeah would be able to govern and run these libraries there was a really great
diagram so so there there's definitely been ideas for a long time
about what this could look like.
Yeah, I mean, I guess in the collectivized economy
of revolutionary Barcelona,
libraries still existed, Athenaeus existed,
and I'm sure it was along the syndicalist model
because everything was.
So yeah, I think that's a good thing
for people to look towards.
I want to stop and take one more break,
and then I want to talk about what people can do to protect libraries. always said is just a beardless, d***less version of me and that's the name of our podcast, Beardless D***less Me. I'm the old one. I'm the young one. And every week we
try to make each other laugh really hard. Sounds innocent, doesn't it? A lot of
cussing, a lot of bad language. It's for adults only. Or listen to it with your
kid. Could be a family show. We're not quite sure. We're still figuring it out.
It's a work in progress. Listen to Beardless D***less Me on the iHeart radio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever. you get your podcasts. Are your ears bored?
Yeah.
Are you looking for a new podcast that will make you laugh, learn, and say que?
Yeah.
Then tune in to Locatora Radio, Season 10 today.
Okay.
I'm Diossa.
I'm Mala.
The host of Locatora Radio, a radiophonic novella.
Which is just a very extra way of saying a podcast.
We're launching this season with a mini series, totally nostalgic.
A four part series about the Latinos who shaped pop culture in the early 2000s.
It's Lala checking in with all things Y2K 2000s.
My favorite memory honestly was us having our own media platforms
like Mundos and MTV3.
You could turn on the TV, you see Thalia,
you see JLo, Nina Sky, Evie Queen,
all the girlies doing their things,
all of the beauty reflected right back at us.
It was everything.
Tune in to Locatora Radio Season 10.
Now that's what I call a podcast.
Listen to Locatora Radio Season 10. Now that's what I call a podcast. Listen to Locatora Radio Season 10 on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Sonoro and iHeart's MyCultura podcast network
present The Setup, a new romantic comedy podcast
starring Harvey Guillen and Christian Navarro.
The Setup follows a lonely museum curator
searching for love.
But when the perfect man walks into his life.
Well, I guess I'm saying I like you.
You like me?
He actually is too good to be true.
This is a con.
I'm conning you to get the Delano painting.
We could do this together.
To pull off this heist, they'll have to get close and jump into the deep end together.
That's a huge leap, Fernando, don't you think?
After you, Chulito.
But love is the biggest risk they'll ever take.
Fernando is never going to love you
as much as he loves this job.
Chulito, that painting is ours.
Listen to The Set Up as part of the MyCultura Podcast Network, available on the iHeart Radio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
On November 5th, 2018, at 6.33 a.m., a red Volkswagen Golf was found abandoned in a ditch
out in Sleephole Valley.
The driver's seat door was open.
No traces of footsteps leaving the vehicle.
No belongings were found, except for a cassette tape lodged in the player.
On that tape were ten vile,
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, grotesque, horrific stories that to this day have been kept restricted
from the public.
Until now.
You feeling this too?
A horror anthology podcast. You feeling this too?
A horror anthology podcast.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, we are back.
So currently, like, I mean, this is like a funding cliff for the library system, right?
I suppose it's hard to say, but how long would it take before people stop seeing these services
if Doge was to start doging tomorrow?
I honestly can't tell.
I think that people...
It's hard to say now, right?
Because we do have the funding there.
Will it actually happen?
Will the thing happen?
Yeah.
That has already been allocated. I think we have a little bit of time, but I
would expect if that congressional oomph isn't expressed that, especially when
summer reading rolls around, we'll really start to see it because that's
something that a lot of people depend on to keep their kids occupied during the
summer. Yeah. And especially out, you especially out in red states and rural areas,
it's going to be very much like the,
I never thought the leopards were going to eat my face.
Yeah.
That kind of situation.
Which is sad, because it's someone's kid who
doesn't get to go to the library very often.
Right.
Right.
That sucks, because it's going to be a lot of kids,
especially without those
resources.
Yeah.
I think about how I wouldn't have survived my undergraduate without libraries.
All my grad school books are super expensive, especially academic books.
I relied very heavily on interlibrary loan.
Yeah.
And this is at the university level, to be sure, where books are very expensive.
But at the public and school library level, you know, this is exactly why this is happening,
is because there is this ongoing narrative from the last few decades where people, especially
like queer kids, say that the library saved their lives.
Young people of color saying like, this is the only place I could see myself in culture
by reading these books.
So of course, of course this is happening because that
You know, they want to take that away. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it's a place where people can kind of exist. Yeah without them. Yeah
So let's talk about like how can people engage to protect their libraries?
What can they do what what are like some action items they can take? I unfortunately don't have great news
I don't think you know because of the way this is working and it is so much about just
like raw brute power that no one at the federal government or even state governments for the
most part seems to be able to counter.
It's just like not something they can conceive of.
Because they already are doing things that supposedly shouldn't be allowed, right?
We've already had the congressional funding.
This should have a congressional, you know, this is passed by Congress and yet
an executive order and Elon Musk can undo it, right?
If things were working, this wouldn't be happening.
Right.
So, so we are really kind of down, down the line a little bit in what we can do
and how effective it's going to be.
That said, there are things we can do.
A lot of them are the, uh, the things that liberals usually do, which is like calling
your senator over and over and over again every day, and your representatives and your
state government too, to make sure that your state government is paying attention to what
they're going to lose. There are certainly things one can sign on to for major library
organizations. The ALA has been writing a lot and less formal organizations than that.
I think one thing that we can always be doing, not just in this situation,
but if you want to be supporting libraries,
one of the best things and easiest things you can do is go get a library card
if you don't already have one and use your damn library.
There's probably something there that you want.
Yeah.
And that actually really does help because libraries, whether it's
with something like IMLS or whether it's grants from foundations and or local funders, you know,
their local government are better able to make their argument for why they should be given money
if they have good statistics to say we had 10% more readers this year, you know, the number of
books we loaned this year is higher than it's ever been.
People are coming to our events in droves.
That kind of, you know, success breeds success.
If they can show that to potential funders, they're more likely to get money.
So go, don't even bother to read the book.
Just check the book out, keep it for a week and give it back if you don't have time to read it.
Make those numbers go up.
Yeah, yeah.
And you can even, like, let's say you're not inclined to go to the library for whatever
reason and you don't like going out or you're worried about COVID or something.
You can do most of this online, right?
If you have Libby, you can borrow ebooks.
You can borrow ebooks and audiobooks from Libby.
Some libraries have streaming movies.
A lot of libraries have still either
all online or hybrid events that you can watch rather than having to go to the event at the
library. You know, the one thing about some of those streaming services and Libby that
I will caution about is that your data is less secure. If that's something you're concerned
about, then it would be borrowing paper books.
Okay, that's good to know.
Because most libraries, even in the kind of tech dystopian future we live in, do a decent
job or at least try to be good about your borrowing data when you borrow hard copies.
But because things like Libby and the streaming services are third party integrations, those
collect some amount of use data.
So it's absolutely great to use those,
but I would caution that if you are a person who has a very high threat model
and you want to be careful about your data, go for the paper.
Okay. Yeah, it's a nicer experience to read a paper book as well.
What about if people,
I know lots of people who are librarians listen,
see you, mommy, is there a way that they can organize,
is there a way that people are organizing either to prevent this
or like as a way of harm reduction, right?
Like as a way of reducing the damage that the state can do to people's access to learning.
Yeah. So there are a few more radical organizations
that I think are worth paying attention to.
My favorite is Library of Freedom Project.
They're really wonderful.
And more willing to say the thing without bullshit.
The thing that, you know, I would obviously urge every worker to do this,
but if your workplace is not unionized, start working on that.
That will always give you more power.
So you should start trying to organize your workplace.
Yeah, definitely. Hopefully there's still time for people to do that.
Yeah. Who knows where that's gonna go. But you can at least try. Yeah, it's still legal now.
Yeah, right. Why not? Why not start? And like, regardless of what happens, like
we're stronger in this together than we are apart. And the unions have done a lot
to prevent fascism in the past.
And similarly, there are, depending upon what state you live in, there might be a state library
organization that is active and that would be just a good way to make connections with other
libraries near you and their librarians and you know maybe if you do lose some of your funding,
you can put your heads together and you know use each other's resources and have joint programming
and things like that.
That makes sense.
Are people attempting, so I know some of the stuff IMLS have is like online archives,
are people attempting to somehow download that in order to preserve it in the event that it goes away?
I don't know that that's really...
Is that not what's at threat?
That's not really what we...
Yeah, I think that there are other kind of data rescue projects with the federal government
that have better data than that.
IMLS doesn't have that much data, so I wouldn't be too concerned with that.
Okay, so it's more like along the workplace organizing side.
Yeah, it's definitely like trying to figure out how to make your and the libraries around
you keep going and offering their things
to your communities that they've been offering.
Yeah, definitely.
It would be pretty tragic.
Like, there's a library not so far from my house
that I can ride my bike to and I go there all the time.
And it would be really tragic to be without that.
Yeah.
So yeah, please continue to organize your libraries.
Is there anything else that you'd like to plug or suggest
people?
Like it's a pretty bleak time generally and I think a lot of us take refuge, especially in reading actually. It's a way you can escape terrible things. Is there anything else you'd
like to kind of suggest for people as we dive deeper into fascism every day at the moment?
I think in libraries and elsewhere it's just being able to offer a counter narrative, like
not buying into the idea that the library is a money hole, you know?
Yeah.
It can only be valued monetarily.
So when you hear that, maybe start going to your library's board meetings.
And when you hear those kinds of things said, get online for the comments and offer a different
narrative and you can do that all over your life in different ways.
When you hear that narrative that is monetary and neoliberal and harmful, offer a different
one.
Yeah, I think that's really good.
Like it's so sad to think that we should have to quantify the value of everything, monetarily,
but especially something like a library, like so many people have had such positive engagements with them,
which have nothing to do with the cash next to this,
or like generating revenue,
and that's what makes them valuable,
and what makes them special sometimes.
Yeah, hopefully people can advocate for that.
How would you find your library's board meeting if you wanted to?
If you have a public library near you, they should have a website and the
website should have an events page that includes board meetings, hopefully other information
about your library's board as well.
And if you can't find it, maybe call up the library and ask.
They'll probably just tell you.
They're really good at information there.
Yeah, yeah, that is the thing that they do.
All right.
Well, thank you so much for joining us, Jamie.
That was great.
It was really, really helpful.
Thanks for having me.
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