Some recent Kentucky
headlines:
Maker's Mark, fittingly, is honoring
Adolf Rupp:
http://www.bizjournals.com/louisville/news/2015/04/01/makers-mark-honors-former-kentucky-coach-with-new.html?ana=fbk
Bryan Station High School in Lexington
Kentucky once chased another High School team's bus because they had
found out that one of their players were gay... because, you know,
chasing gay boys is the best way to prove that you're not gay:
http://www.lex18.com/story/28699566/kentucky-high-school-basketball-player-harassed-by-opposing-team
http://www.outsports.com/2015/4/1/8316867/dalton-maldonado-gay-basketball-kentucky
Congress Attempts to Kill Patriot Act:
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/patriot-act-killer-congress-surveillance-state-repeal-act/
President Obama wants more Programs
like Code Louisville:
http://wfpl.org/president-obama-wants-programs-like-code-louisville/
Some flooding happened on April 3 in Ky
because of ½ foot of rain fell the night before:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/capital-weather-gang/wp/2015/04/03/training-thunderstorms-cause-dangerous-overnight-flooding-in-kentucky-indiana/
Massive fire in Louisville:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/04/03/fire-general-electric-plant-kentucky_n_6999530.html
Noah's Ark Project in Grant County,
Kentucky was getting tax breaks from the state, and then they
weren't, so they sued, using Kentucky's 2013 General Ass's Religious
Freedom Law:
http://wfpl.org/ark-project-using-kentuckys-religious-freedom-law-sue-state/
xxx
Lexington's wyte collar mafia has
arrested Henry Earl, the contemporary “King William Solomon”,
over 1,500 Times. Henry Earl, who also goes by “James Brown”, has
been arrested by da Lexington Police over 1,500 times!!!
Homelessness, Poverty, Pollution... 3
areas that proves that Capitalism has failed.
1,500 times! I can't even fathom that
number. I had to add up the number of days in a year just to see if
that many arrests was even possible. That's what Lexington's
taxpayers spend their money on. Instead of helping Henry Earl,
they've spent millions of dollars to arresting, prosecuting, judging,
and incarcerating him, and not one penny on helping the poor homeless
man.
In 2013, Henry was in jail during his
birthday, and Thanksgiving. One thing Lexington has never considered
doing: giving Henry Earl a home.
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/documents/drunk/a-henry-earl-thanksgiving-756903
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2518767/Henry-Earl-hearing-Most-arrested-man-goes-judge-hear-hell-celebrate-holidays-jail.html
http://www.cnn.com/2013/12/04/us/kentucky-henry-earl-most-arrested/
http://www.wcpo.com/news/state/state-kentucky/henry-earl-lexington-ky-man-arrested-1267-times
Perhaps Lexington Kentucky can learn
some love and compassion, and help Henry Earl out? Or do they
actually believe that more violence, and jailtime will help Henry
Earl out? He's homeless... you think that may be a reason for his
eagerness to drink alcohol?
Henry Earl has spent 6,000 days in the
Fayette County Jail (“Detention Center”... sounds like after
school “detention”, doesn't it? Carlin was right... it's Jail, or
Prison, or Shell Shock, not Detention Center, or Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder).
6,000 days in custody... Lexington's
jail should be named the Henry Earl Jailhouse, especially considering
he's been housed in that building more than any other building in
Lexington. Or maybe the alleys and sidewalks should bare his name.
It's even more disheartening when one
reads in Weird Kentucky about how a drunken homeless man helped save
the people of Lexington, many years ago.
William “King” Solomon was well
known as Lexington's “Otis”, the town drunk. Eventually,
Lexington's elite ruling class sold King Solomon to a free Black
woman who helped her sell her baked goods at the market.
The Summer of 1833, a horrendous
Cholera epidemic swept across America, hitting Lexington hard. Half
of the population in Lexington evacuated the city. The streets had
over 500 Cholera induced corpses strewn all about stinking up the
city.
Even though every single Lexingtonian
was afraid of contacting Cholera, and didn't do anything with the
bodies, King William Solomon took all of the bodies to the cemetery,
and gave them all a proper burial. It took 2 months to bury them all.
He even slept in the cemetery at night, sticking to the work of
burying the dead until the task was finished.
Solomon never contacted Cholera because
Cholera is spread by drinking “shit water” (water contaminated by
the feces of those already infected with Cholera), and King Solomon
preferred alcohol to water.
Lexington didn't learn their history
lessons. We shouldn't treat our Jesus Christ saviors like dogshit.
Henry Earl needs housing, and he needs housing now. And love.
House him in the the King Solomon's
housing projects for the homeless. Or maybe let him live in the many
abandoned houses in the cities and countrysides. We have 1 homeless
person for every 22 empty houses. All that would be needed... is for
somebody to care, for somebody to give a single fuck.
But that's doubtful.
When King Solomon, the savior of
Lexington, Kentucky, was buried, he was buried in an unmarked grave,
even though he saved the city of Lexington of Cholera spreading
further. Even the homeless who are heroes aren't honored by us.
BUT, there is a huge statue of the
great wyte supremacyst John Hunt Morgan in Lexington's downtown
square.
Henry Earl was born October 24, 1949.
xxxXxxx
Just a few months ago, last year,
September 2014, 29 year old Jesse Gibbons, a father of a 3 year old
boy, was murdered by KSP, Lexington police, and Madison County's
Sheriff's Office:
http://reason.com/blog/2014/10/20/shootout-or-police-shooting-kentucky-tv
Topix users weigh in:
http://www.topix.com/forum/city/richmond-ky/T6UNFDK1K2E6QJNG0
“Truth” of Morehead Kentucky typed:
“Thank goodness he's
white. At least there won't be any rioting over it.”
“Donald Sterling” wrote:
“His son is better off
now.”
“Qualified Immunity” says:
“Search it. As long as a
cop states that he believes your 2 year old is making a furtive
movement towards its diaper and could possibly produce a weapon, its
legal for the officer's weapon to discharge toward the toddler in an
effort to neutralized the potential deadly threat of harm to an
officer.”
“After leaving the scene, police say
Gibbons led Lexington officers on a chase that took them all the way
to Richmond after Gibbons's car crashed on the Eastern Bypass near
Lancaster Avenue.”
“Kentucky police call killing man with no gun in hail of bullets a 'shoot out,' refuse to answer questions or name the killer cops.” http://xrepublic.tv/node/10874
“Kentucky police call killing man with no gun in hail of bullets a 'shoot out,' refuse to answer questions or name the killer cops.” http://xrepublic.tv/node/10874
Jesse Gibbons has gunshot wounds in his
chest, stomach, and back. The police of Kentucky shot Jesse Gibbons,
a man with no gun, in the back.
“Kentucky State Police won't answer
whether or not Jesse Gibbons, 29, was armed with a gun when police
fired a hail of bullets at him. They also haven't said which
officers, from which departments, fired their weapons. A brief video
clip of the incident provided to LEX 18 showed what sounded like a
dozen shots fired. A longer version online depicted what sounded like
more than 30 shots fired in the span of about 30 seconds. Gibbons'
father says his son didn't even own a gun. WKYT previously reported
eight officers involved in the shooting: from either the sheriff's
office, the state police, and/or Lexington police. Kentucky State
Police won't talk about the investigation because it's open: officers
from the Lexington Division of Police, the Kentucky State Police,
Madison County Sheriff's Office, and the Richmond Police Department
were involved in the entire incident.”
According to the report, at 9:29 p.m.,
police were chasing Gibbons and called for a helicopter to help. At
9:33 p.m., an officer reported shots fired.
At 9:38 p.m., Gibbons is reported to be
in a line of trees, at the same time there was a report of more shots
fired. At 9:41 p.m. an officer reports movement behind the vehicle
and that a male is in the woods. During the 34 minutes before Jesse
Gibbons is placed into an ambulance, he laid on the ground. Police
say they were making sure the scene was secure. Gibbons died shortly
after he arrived at U.K. Hospital. Mr. Gibbons' bottom line is clear,
"At some point it has to be brought to light what actually
happened. I guess my biggest fear if there was culpability on the
part of the police and again, in my heart I feel there was because
they killed a man that did not have firearm, and I'd have to say
without provocation." The Commonwealth Attorney in Madison
County has the case. He says it could be a few weeks before he is
finished with his review. The Lexington police helicopter was called
out, and it shined a light on the suspect to help officers determine
the man's condition. He was said to be lying on the ground,
apparently injured. After a standoff lasting about a half-hour, the
man was taken into custody, and he was taken to University of
Kentucky Chandler Hospital, where he was pronounced dead, state
police said.
http://www.kentucky.com/2014/09/13/3428049_man-assaults-lexington-officer.html
xxxXxxx
White folks riot over a basketball game
loss, or a win, but not when a white man is shot and killed. Black
folks rioted over the killing of an 18 year old Black man in 1994.
Black unrest in Lexington, Kentucky:
http://www.nytimes.com/1994/10/26/us/black-unrest-in-lexington-ky.html
Chief Walsh said the 18-year-old man,
Antonio Orlando Sullivan, was killed after five police officers went
to his house with warrants charging him with assault and wanton
endangerment in connection with a street shooting on Sept. 30. The
youth was hiding in a closet and did not answer when officers ordered
him out, Chief Walsh said. "As Sullivan was in the process of
stepping into the living-room area, a police officer's weapon was
accidentally discharged, striking Sullivan in the head," the
Chief said. He said a 22-year police veteran, Sgt. Phil Vogel, had
been relieved of duty pending the investigation.
In 1995, Lexington Mayor Pam Miller
founded Partners for Youth, a non-profit organization that serves as
a clearinghouse for funding programs for youth in Lexington. This
development occurred after the shooting and killing of Antonio
Orlando Sullivan, an eighteen-year-old African American male, by a
white police officer in October 1994 which had caused a public
outcry. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pam_Miller
On January 9, 1997, the Fayette County
Attorney's Office filed a paternity action in Fayette District Court
upon the complaint of Keysha Spaulding, who is the mother of Kameren
Spaulding, against the estate of Tony Sullivan. The complaint alleged
that Tony Sullivan was the biological father of Kameren Spaulding. On
January 10, 1997, the county attorney filed a paternity action in
Fayette District Court upon the complaint of Dacoma H. Walker, mother
of the child Daytonia O. Walker, against the estate of Tony Sullivan.
The complaint alleged that Tony Sullivan was the biological father of
Daytonia Walker.
http://caselaw.findlaw.com/ky-court-of-appeals/1163379.html#sthash.x8JKFFi7.dpuf
The unrest in the city started after
police officers, bearing an arrest warrant, entered an apartment at
the Bluegrass-Aspendale housing project shortly before 10 A.M. on
Tuesday seeking Antonio Orlando Sullivan, an 18-year-old wanted in
connection with a gang-related shooting last month in which one
person was wounded. Mr. Sullivan, the police said, hid in a closet
and emerged only after four police officers, their guns drawn,
repeatedly ordered him to come out. As he emerged, a shot was fired,
apparently by Officer Philip H. Vogel, striking Mr. Sullivan in the
head and killing him, the police said.
After initially calling the incident an
"accidental shooting," Chief Lawrence E. Walsh today backed
away from that description and announced that the Federal Bureau of
Investigation as well as the state's Commonwealth's Attorney for
Fayette County would be conducting independent investigations. Dottie
Bean, a spokeswoman for the city, said Officer Vogel, a 22-year
veteran, had been "relieved of duty with pay" pending the
outcome of the investigations. Three other officers who were with
Officer Vogel have been temporarily transferred to office duties. The
Rev. Michael Wilson, a former member of the Lexington-Fayette Urban
County Council, said he knew of at least one witness, Joy Thomas, a
25-year-old baby sitter, who asserted that Mr. Sullivan was shot
while his arms were raised.
February 4, 1994. Lexington's Grand
Jury fails to indict Vogel:
http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/1995-02-04/news/9502040512_1_vogel-rampage-lexington
xxxXxxx
April 15, 2004. The Lexington (KY)
Herald-Leader reports: Although it expressed sympathy to the victim's
family, a Letcher County grand jury yesterday declined to indict a
Kentucky State Police officer who shot and killed an unarmed man
during a January drug deal in Jenkins. James E. Alexander, 62, of
Roanoke, Va., was shot twice with an automatic rifle Jan. 14 by state
police Sgt. Bobby Day during a drug investigation using
undercover officers at a Jenkins house. There were reports afterward
that Alexander was shot when he reached under his jacket for a cell
phone, said Sgt. Phil Crumpton, a state police spokesman in
Frankfort. Alexander's family members and friends appeared upset
yesterday. “If they didn't find any drugs on him or guns on him,
how can they do that?” asked Alexander's uncle, James L. Alexander,
78, of Lebanon, Va. He never carried a gun. "They're just
covering up. They've done it again. They've done it again. I've
talked to the police and the way they were talking, I could tell they
were thinking: We just got another black man off the street."
April 19, 2004.
http://www.alternet.org/story/18475/a_tale_of_two_unarmed_black_men_shot_in_kentucky
xxx
UPDATE on Library Book Charges
(#bookghazi):
I hit two deer on the way to Kenton
County on March 31, 2015 at 4am in the morning on my way to the
Kenton County Courthouse for this stupid ass fk'n charge.
Kenton County District Judge Kenneth L.
Easterling claimed a few interesting things:
Easterling said there's no “no contest”
plea in Kentucky. I thought we had the Alford Plea. I wonder when the
Alford Plea was made illegal in Kentucky, who did it, and why.
Easterling's threshold for if you can
afford an attorney is if you own a $1,000 vehicle. He must have never
had to pay for an attorney.
Easterling also said that there's no
statute of limitations if the charges were filed with the proper time
frame. So... note to self: press charges on criminals immediately.
After going to the library, and paying
the $30 fine, I walked to my truck, and my meter just went up, and a
meter maid was there about to take a picture of my license plate... I
told her that I'm here... she asked me, “Is this you?” I said
yeah, and she walked way immediately.
Like... damn. This shit's never ending. Easterling, with creeper mustache, wants to ruin my life over this bullshit. Stupid weakass bitch mf'er.
xxx
The 60s generation saw 2 Presidents get
toppled over because of an unpopular war.... a single war, not a wide
ranging war, against the entire world... Yemen, Syria, Pakistan,
Somalia, Honduras, Venezuela, etc.
If there's an old debate between the
Hippies of folk lore, and the Nixonians, then the Nixonians have won.
When folks looked at JFK, they saw what they wanted to be. When they
saw Nixon, they saw what they really were.
Today's Republicans make Nixon look
like a liberal... and Ronald Reagan too.
xxx
On the Front Lines of the War on Drugs
in Kentucky:
On Thursday last week, a federal jury
in Covington convicted Alberto Lara-Chavez, 45, of Planada,
California, Felix Agundiz-Montes, 30, of Walton, Kentucky, and Jose
Alberto-Lara, 23, of Planada, Califorina. Jose was convicted of
conspiracy to distribute 100 kilograms or more of marijuana.
http://rcnky.com/articles/2015/03/20/convicted-men-responsible-large-quanitity-heroin-marijuana-northern-kentucky
Kerry B. Harvey, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of
Kentucky, and Joseph Reagan, Special Agent in Charge, Detroit Field
Division, Drug Enforcement Administration, jointly made the
announcement. The investigation was conducted by the Drug Enforcement
Administration, the United States Postal Investigation Service, and
the Internal Revenue Service. The United States was represented in
the trial by Assistant United States Attorneys Tony Bracke and Jason
Denney. The defendants are scheduled to appear for sentencing before
Judge Amul Thapar, in Covington, on July 1, 2015.
“Hayden, a Kentucky-born Vietnam
veteran with nine siblings, four children, and several grandchildren,
had been busted for growing pot before. The first time, he got 60
days in the county jail. The second time, he served five months. This
time he received a life sentence, the mandatory minimum that federal
law prescribes for someone with two prior convictions who grows 1,000
or more marijuana plants. "He's seen murderers and bank robbers
come and go while he's been in prison," his daughter, Lisa
Hayden, told a Kentucky newspaper last year. "Something's really
wrong with that."
Evidently President Obama agreed.
Hayden was one of 22 drug offenders whose sentences Obama commuted on
Tuesday. Now 65, he has spent 16 years in federal prison for managing
that marijuana farm in Michigan. But instead of dying behind bars, he
is scheduled to be released in July, along with seven other drug war
prisoners serving life sentences for offenses involving cocaine,
methamphetamine, and heroin.”
http://reason.com/blog/2015/04/03/obama-steps-up-commutations-feeding-drug
“While responding to a call to check
the welfare of someone at 3051 Bristow Road on Saturday, Warren
County Sheriff’s Office deputies smelled marijuana coming from the
home, according to a news release from the sheriff’s office. Larry
Byrd Jr., 32, refused to allow deputies to search his home. After
obtaining a search warrant, deputies found an indoor marijuana
growing operation, according to the release. They found 22 marijuana
plants and about 7 ounces of processed marijuana. All the marijuana
was seized.”
http://www.bgdailynews.com/for_the_record/police_news/deputies-find-marijuana-plants/article_49e28786-de24-51b8-b1d4-c393e83ce52d.html
The author of this article isn't named, nor are the criminal police
officers who assaulted, falsely imprisoned, and stole from Larry
Byrd. Larry Byrd was released Sunday from Warren County Regional Jail
after posting a $6,000 bond. An April 14 court date is set.
http://www.wbko.com/home/headlines/Warren-County-Man-Arrested-For-Growing-Marijuana-In-His-Home-297192021.html
This Bowling Green Daily News article
also doesn't name it's author, nor the criminal police officers who
attacked, and assaulted, and stole from Chris Harrison-Docks.
“Western Kentucky guard Chris Harrison-Docks was cited Monday by
WKU Police with possession of marijuana, buying/possessing drug
paraphernalia, careless driving and failure or improper signaling. An
officer saw Harrison-Docks driving northbound at a high rate of speed
on University Boulevard just after 6 p.m., according to a police
report. Harrison-Docks was pulled over at Old Morgantown Road and
Rochester Avenue after failing to signal before switching lanes, the
report said. In a search of the vehicle, the officer found a "red
plastic grinder containing marijuana residue and a cigar package
containing a freshly rolled blunt with another cigar" in the
center console, according to the report. A plastic bag with marijuana
residue was in the front passenger door compartment, the report said.
All items were seized and logged as evidence. Harrison-Docks was
cited to appear in Warren District Court at 1:30 p.m. April 15. It's
the fourth marijuana possession citation, a misdemeanor, involving a
WKU men's basketball player in the past 14 months. Guards Brandon
Price and DJ Clayton were charged in September and November,
respectively, on charges of possession of marijuana. T.J. Price was
cited in January 2014 on charges of possession of marijuana and
possession of drug paraphernalia. Brandon Price was ordered to
complete 25 hours of community service, which was increased to 50
hours in October after being charged with reckless driving. T.J.
Price later paid a $209 court fine. A pretrial conference in
Clayton's case is set for Thursday in district court.”
http://www.bgdailynews.com/sports/wku/harrison-docks-cited-on-charge-of-marijuana-possession/article_858283d8-d48b-11e4-9304-1755aa08fc58.html
This story is pretty crazy, but it
shows you what the drug war does to folks. Since cannabis is illegal,
mf'ers think they can rob you, and what you gonna do? Call the po-po.
No way Jose. Either you step up and handle the criminal matter
yourself, or let it go. The failed War on Drugs ups the stakes of the
already high-stakes game. “Jones Sr. and Gipson are in Warren
County Regional Jail. Jones’ bond is set at $6,000 for the local
charges and an additional $200 for a warrant from another
jurisdiction, according to online jail records. Gipson’s bond is
$6,000. Both are scheduled for a preliminary hearing at 9 a.m.
Wednesday in Warren District Court.”
http://www.bgdailynews.com/news/kidnapping-other-allegations-lead-to-drug-charges/article_46ecfe0d-4a58-53c9-89c9-90a8c5b03063.html
“Nathaniel Ramsey, 28, told
paramedics that he had taken 2 grams of meth and was overdosing...
After Ramsey was released from the hospital, police served an
outstanding child support warrant on him, records show. Additionally,
he was charged with first-degree possession of a controlled substance
and drug paraphernalia – buy/possess. He is in Warren County
Regional Jail in lieu of a combined bond of $1,625. Drug charges —
Just before 1 a.m. Friday, police arrested a Bowling Green teen after
seeing a car in the parking lot of the Western Kentucky University
Center for Research and Development. The center was closed, and the
man’s vehicle was the only car in the lot. Police detected a strong
odor of burned marijuana coming from inside the car, records show. He
was released from jail after posting a $3,000 bond the day of his
arrest, according to online jail records.”
http://www.bgdailynews.com/news/for_the_record/after-being-treated-for-meth-overdose-man-goes-to-jail/article_4337f3f7-8016-5f9b-8b3d-82fd2a455a2c.html
“Felmon Abdurzak was charged with operating a motor vehicle under
the influence of alcohol or drugs, trafficking in marijuana less than
8 ounces, trafficking a controlled substances within 1,000 feet of a
school, first-degree promoting contraband, reckless driving, drug
paraphernalia – buy/possess, possession of a marijuana and
third-degree possession of a controlled substance. He is in jail in
lieu of a $6,000 bond.”
Once again, Bowling Green Daily News is
involved in criminal assaults against the public by criminal police.
The Bowling Green Daily News didn't print the author of this article,
which suggests the entire newspaper wrote the article, and then they
didn't print the names of the criminal police officers who frisked,
stole from, assaulted, and imprisoned a non-violent man, which makes
it look as if the entire police force in Bowling Green—Bowling
Green Police, Warren County Sheriff's Department, Kentucky State
Police, etc—were there on the scene arresting Mr. Clayton. “Western
Kentucky freshman guard DJ Clayton was sentenced to eight hours of
community service today, stemming from a citation in November that
included charges of possession of marijuana and possession of alcohol
by a minor, both misdemeanors. Clayton was not present in Warren
District Court today and was represented by his attorney, Brian
Lowder.”
http://www.bgdailynews.com/sports/wku/wku-s-clayton-ordered-to-complete-community-service/article_f1a8a2d7-c24f-5c41-a83b-ae999f0b13a4.html
“Clayton, 19, was also ordered to complete a marijuana education
program in addition to his court costs. He was pulled over in a
traffic stop near campus Nov. 6 and also cited for careless driving
and failure to signal, which are traffic violations. Clayton, who was
18 at the time, was not arrested. The Daily News reported Sunday that
Clayton requested his release to transfer from WKU.”
13 Outrageous Criminal Drug War Gestapo
stories across America:
xxx
Pump Video for UK's Final Four gameday: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zWkEkeGpfmM
My Cracker Side:
My Black Side:
My German Side:
3 songs I like to loop over these days:
Vote Johnny Masters, a PSA (2010):
xxxXxxx
Atheists on Easter:
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2015/04/how-are-atheists-spending-their-easter-morning-by-mocking-christians-on-twitter-of-course/
17 Times Fresh Prince of Bel-Air Got
Way Too Real:
http://www.buzzfeed.com/carlanka/17-times-the-fresh-prince-of-bel-air-got-way-way-too-real#.wh6pqNRWO
Watch out 50 Shades of Grey! 8 Freaky
Sex Stories in the Bible:
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2015/04/here-are-the-8-freakiest-sex-things-in-the-bible/
Class Struggle, the Board Game:
http://www.critical-theory.com/class-struggle-board-game-greatest-exist/
7 Racist Emails Justice Department
Focused on in Ferguson:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2015/03/04/the-seven-racist-e-mails-the-justice-department-highlighted-in-its-report-on-ferguson-police/
Why 1.3 Million Iraqis Killed Aren't
Worth Mentioning:
http://stopwar.org.uk/news/why-1-3-million-killed-in-the-us-uk-war-on-iraq-are-not-worth-mentioning
Some Louisville Jailer open fire on
somebody else yesterday, April 5, 2015. None of their names were printed, doubtful we'll ever
find out who the “official” shooter is in this case:
http://www.wlky.com/news/officerinvolved-shooting-reported-in-clifton/32157494?request-from-editor=true&showAds=0&utm_source=Social&utm_medium=FBPAGE&utm_campaign=WLKY%20News%20Louisville,%20Kentucky%20-%20wlkynews&Content%20Type=Story&linkId=13302546
Honesty
- Integrity – Tenacity
FunPage #1: http://young4ky.blogspot.com/2015/04/fun-page-1-return-of-ninja.html
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