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Talk:Paul Singer (businessman)/Archive 4

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above, but I think it'd be more fruitful to consider policy and not how it's "been discussed endlessly at financial institutions and households of the people it affects" - something with which Knowledge has nothing to do whatsoever. Again, I see no sources indicating he is an "advocate for the industry"; what I do see are sources partially quoting him while discussing how hedge funds work - as a direct consequence of him drawing flak. We should not mirror the flak, we should present a neutral and encyclopaedic collection of facts, like a proper encyclopaedia. I agree the article needs rewriting and partial rereferencing (some of the citations are quite good). As for relevant countries, they could be represented in due regard, but we have to be careful given nationalist sentiment usually trumps neutrality. I believe non-actors are usually the best sources to be found. I reiterate my thanks for your comments,
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into the usage of the term. I could equally make the point that it is cultural suicide to just write off anything like this as "good business" and also stress that Knowledge is not a venue for the rules of the market to determine how information is presented (as you did with the 2% argument) since I would hope that knowledge can transcend our current collective ideological predicament. Consensus has been reached now in multiple discussions on the usage of the term and that should be respected - these circular discussions are highly unproductive. It would be far more productive to focus on areas in which we can reach agreement on, which I suspect are plentiful. One such area could be to bring in neutral editors familiar with the domestic press of Peru and Congo to improve those sections using sources from local media, which is currently completely absent from an article dominated by the US and UK press.
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In part, the reason for which you say that there are mostly sources "quoting him while discussing how hedge funds work" is there has been an overwhelming (and somewhat undue) focus on financial industry sources, the types of outlets which give advice to investors or pundits rather than providing more comprehensive coverage which doesn't appeal to their readership. I don't fully understand what you're getting at with the "nationalist sentiment" and "neutral actors" statements - is it that somehow the free press in the relevant countries are involved in the process and can't be trusted because they come from these specific countries? I can't say I agree with the logic there if that's the case, but I take it that it's not.
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connotations. We cannot have an obvious pejorative used on Knowledge, not for Paul Singer, not for Hitler, not for the Dalai Lama. It is simply unencyclopaedic. Sources discuss it in exactly this sense - they usually play with a supposed "vulture" - capitalist dichotomy, and the only reason they do so is because the analogy is entertaining and entertaining reporting sells. Vulture is, at least until humanity succumbs to cultural suicide, always treated as a metaphor and is shown in quotation marks. Knowledge is not a sensationalist venue; it is to be written in a neutral fashion. Another facile argument that apparently carried considerable weight during our previous discussions was the
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I find your argument absurd. Financial industry sources in fact do not use the "vulture" term. Finally, yes, that is precisely my point. The "free" press in the relevant countries - whose democracies are very often called into question - cannot be considered reliable when there is such a fierce public opinion against these operators (the press is, after all, run by a small segment of the population and not by neutral editorial robots). Have you read these sources? Most of them could be considered quite heated opinion pieces. Best,
638:- Would you object to the use of the term "loan shark" or mentioning that a tort lawyer had been called an "ambulance chaser"? I sorta appreciate your argument, but this doesn't strike me as something which is clearly pejorative. I mean, if someone had been called a "queer f***er" by a large number of RS's, I might understand not using that in the lead on the basis of it's clear pejorative and derogatory nature, but I'm not sure "vulture" really rises to that level. 31: 195:(not quite, given the references are invalid). Furthermore, I don't quite understand why the majority of the article's content discusses Elliott Management's minor workings in 3 countries, when that could easily be merged with their corresponding article. Considering the 2% figure I cited above, this seems heavily undue, most of all given this is Singer's biography. Please tell me if I'm missing anything. Thanks again for your help. Best, 402:
primary aims had been to be a bad musician, which would be ludicrous to leave out of a lede if that were the case. Rather than just remove, it would be far more straightforward to simply incorporate other sources (maybe one of the many NickCT pointed to) or just to reword the phrase. The reason it does not currently substantiate word-for-word what the sources say is because it was amended numerous times.
356:- Thanks for your comments. I think the bottom line is that there are dozens and dozens of RS mention that the "vulture" characterization/criticism. Given the frequent mention in the sources it seems neutral and due that we mention it here. If it was only the three currently cited, I might agree with you. If you don't feel the current refs are sufficient to support inclusion in the lead, have you looked 143: 134:, Elliott's direct competition saying "I wouldn't say it's borderline immoral. It is." Again the author appears to have contacted a spokesman for Elliott who declined to comment. Furthermore, the source again quotes Bass: "I wouldn't say that we're opposed to the vultures' position" - again refuting the statement. 3) 604:
I don't see it as a dangerous game. "Sexual abuser" (like many other terms for that matter) has a complex definition and hence interpretation, especially considering cultural and legal differences accross the globe. "Vulture" on the other hand is clearly metaphorical and strongly value-laden. What do
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weight by mentioning it in the lead. Similarly, following your Jackson analogy, if you could show that a substantial portion of RS covering Jackson covered him in the context of being a sexual deviant, then yes, you might consider the wording you proposed. I think if you looked at it though you would
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do not state. I find your arguments tinged with bias. Please do present said "countless sources". The bottom line is misrepresenting sources to make a statement is just not allowed on Knowledge. Now to your other argument: most of the sources used in the article are not financial industry sources, so
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reverted my recent copy edit. I'm glad to see most of it remained unchanged - as the article deserved a nice (and brief due to time constraints) update. I noticed a particular sentence was reinstated. Why was this the case? I also arrived at the notion that the sovereign debts subsection occupies 67%
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You clearly were too young to remember the coverage back then. Back to the issue at hand: precisely, "vulture" is used in a derogatory sense, and is thus non-neutral. Not accepting "vulture" is derogatory is a self-defeating notion, given there would be no use to the term weren't it for its negative
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Thank you, NickCT, for your answer. I do not agree with your RS argument either, given the non-neutral quality of the term, which is the prime reason for my comments. Imagine Michael Jackson article's lede saying something along the lines of "Michael Jackson was considered by some a sexual abuser, a
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Hello! Thanks for getting back to me. As a matter of fact, no. I was referring to the entire sentence, which is unsubstantiated by those 3 citations. It seems bizarre to have that stated in the lede when the article appears to have a relatively adequate encyclopaedic tone throughout its bulk. What I
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Well take the example of the lawyer for example. Say some lawyer works up a reputation for an extremely unscrupulous tort practice. His reputation gets so bad that a great number of the sources covering him specificly mention the charge that he is a prime example of an "ambulance chaser". You don't
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His hedge funds and offshore companies are also well-known Vulture funds, as stated by countless sources. It does bare relevance since it is what makes it noteworthy - it's a contemporary issue of huge relevance, which he is at the forefront of and there are again countless sources indicating this.
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Hello SegataSanshiro1. Just a little note: he's a hedge fund manager, not a "vulture" fund manager. Also, it's not a percentage of his profits, rather a percentage of the Elliott Management hedge fund's capital, a very important difference. I'd be glad to review sources, such as my unheeded attempt
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Of course I would. Those are great examples for non-neutral terms. We might see cases where non-neutral terms have permeated into legarl jargon, but that's a whole different matter. Why would you use "vulture" if not for its connotations? That is precisely the point! Regarding results, I don't see
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simply describes the Samsung cartoons ("Samsung has created a ā€œvultureā€ character to lambaste Mr. Singer") and again says Elliott's representatives did not care to comment. Can I ask why we are reintroducing a sentence that clearly does not state what the sources specified say? I'm look forward to
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Not too young to remember, and the Vulture terminology has been in the collective lexicon since at least 2004 (I believe) when it was used by Gordon Brown to describe the Congo case. You've made your views clear on this multiple times now and let's not let this descend into yet another discussion
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The analogy would only be apt if of Michael Jackson's primary "professions" through which he made his name and living had been "sex offender" and if those claims had been substantiated by evidence. This is more akin to if there were widespread criticism of his musical talents and if one of his
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What percentage of Singer's profits is driven by sovereign debt is of little importance. The fact is that all these cases were major international news stories, provoked comments from important figures around the world, and has no doubt been discussed endlessly at financial institutions and
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Probably, but Palast has been deemed non-noteworthy for this article for reasons unknown, even though doing a quick search he's been used as a source multiple times on other pages. Also, your user page which consists of "sock of longtime user for certain topics" might cause problems here.
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You couldn't possibly source anything to that page, which is clearly self-published. If Palast has made equivalent statements elsewhere you might be able to source something to those. If you want to enquire about the reliability of a possible source then start at
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For these reasons, I do not think this has undue weight at all, but do agree that almost all of it needs to be re-written and possibly re-referenced. I've said multiple times, the article would benefit a lot from incorporating sources from the relevant countries.
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Palast has written for The Guarian and BBC, but those sources have also been deemed unusable here in the past for reasons, even when naming Palast in the article as the person making the statements. There's a hefty list of sources which were also ignored
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As you yourself mentioned, the three sources used do not state what the sentence implies - that is enough reason for removal, at least until someone writes and substantiates a different text. Also, nobody's addressing the other issue I raised. Thank you,
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quotes Cristina FernƔndez using "vultures" as a catch-all term not referring to him precisely, then quotes "a person who has worked with him" saying "Singer chafes at the term" - neither supports the statement. 2) The CNBC source quotes
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in asbestos compensation claims; should we summarize this someplace in the article, assuming we can find a non-self-published source? Finding such shouldn't be too hard since the relevant transactions are a matter of public record.
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households of the people it affects. Singer is one of the most well known Vulture fund managers, one of the biggest advocates for the industry (almost its "posterboy") and tends to draw more flak than other figures in the area.
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Once I saw the revert I perused the talk page and saw a long editing history concerning the lede sentence issue. It baffles me as to how this seems controversial. Examining the sources seemingly supporting that claim: 1)
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So Palast is verboten here even if non-selfpub? Interesting; might be worth taking that up more widely. Still, I doubt he's the only one to report on this. (My sock is perfectly acceptable for privacy reasons, per
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for. I'm not sure if it matters whether 2% of Singer's business is this "vulture fund" or if it's 0.2%. If a large number of sources note Singer for his "vulture fund" activities, then we're simply giving the issue
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The analogy is apt given the thousands upon thousands of sources talking about it. Sources need to be carefully analysed and selected for quality - that bit needs to be removed because it is semantically false.
569:- I don't know. Saying something is "derogatory" and hence unuseable is a dangerous game. If I said the term "sexual abuser" was "derogatory" (it probably is) could we not use it on Jackson's page? 191:
mean by this is that having such a subjective characterisation (using 3 faux citations) does not relate with what the rest of the article conveys; as such it is to be interpreted as
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Try going to the "next page" in your google results. Keep going to the next page until you get to the end. Count the number of results based on how many pages deep you can go.
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Nonetheless, I for one would like to see these relevant transactions if you come across them since leaving something like that out of an article would be bordering on absurd.
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The "search engine" test argument is convincing by-the-way. But looking at the unique results from your search, it looks like "Paul singer vulture" wins.
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I don't have any problem with removing the part you're referring to ("a characterization which Singer rejects" -- right?).
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your comments on these 2 related matters. What did the Buddhist say to the hot dog vendor? "Make me one with everything."
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claim he denied". How on earth would this be justified? Same standards are to be used throughout the encyclopaedia.
174: 38: 487: 858: 777: 524: 407: 299: 245: 609:? My cursory search provided 26 times as many results for Paul Singer excluding "vulture" than including it. 668: 621: 552: 506: 436: 391: 329: 267: 207: 158: 641:
Try going to the end of the list in your search results. That will show you the number of unique results.
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You seem to be replying to comments I made to NickCT above. Please keep the discussion organised.
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find that of the plethora of RS out there on Jackson, few would discuss his offender status.
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of the EMC section, which seems to be a case of undue weight, considering sovereign debt
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If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
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P.S. In case you think I'm making the search stuff up as I go, see
457:- Would agree with Sega here. The question is what a subject is 25: 751:
has serious allegations about the subject's involvement as a
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what you mean, I can't find what you allude to. Best,
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think that would deserve somekind of nod in the lead?
795:; thanks, and I'll add that to my user page.) -- 8: 312:as a "vulture" fund, which the sources used 113:of the hedge fund capital, according to the 308:Elliott Management's hedge fund might be 820:Knowledge:Reliable sources/Noticeboard 44:Do not edit the contents of this page. 7: 140: 24: 141: 117:. This appreciation falls under 29: 744:Asbestos and vulture capitalism 18:Talk:Paul Singer (businessman) 1: 164:22:05, 30 November 2015 (UTC) 863:17:42, 3 February 2016 (UTC) 832:07:29, 3 February 2016 (UTC) 805:06:25, 3 February 2016 (UTC) 782:05:18, 3 February 2016 (UTC) 766:04:09, 3 February 2016 (UTC) 710:02:39, 2 December 2015 (UTC) 692:02:33, 2 December 2015 (UTC) 674:01:30, 2 December 2015 (UTC) 651:01:25, 2 December 2015 (UTC) 627:01:15, 2 December 2015 (UTC) 593:00:59, 2 December 2015 (UTC) 579:00:54, 2 December 2015 (UTC) 558:01:30, 2 December 2015 (UTC) 529:00:18, 2 December 2015 (UTC) 512:23:41, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 477:23:27, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 442:23:32, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 412:23:04, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 397:22:08, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 370:20:58, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 335:22:08, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 304:20:50, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 273:19:01, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 250:18:31, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 213:18:17, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 179:07:20, 1 December 2015 (UTC) 885: 111:accounts for less than 2% 42:of past discussions. 492:Paul Singer -vulture 488:Paul singer vulture 119:Knowledge:Criticism 753:vulture capitalist 486:. See results for 310:considered by some 661: 614: 545: 499: 459:primarily notable 429: 422: 384: 322: 260: 200: 151: 97: 96: 54: 53: 48:current talk page 876: 824:Jonathan A Jones 671: 665: 657: 637: 624: 618: 610: 603: 568: 555: 549: 541: 539: 509: 503: 495: 456: 439: 433: 425: 416: 394: 388: 380: 355: 332: 326: 318: 270: 264: 256: 210: 204: 196: 189: 186:Nomoskedasticity 171:Nomoskedasticity 161: 155: 147: 146: 145: 144: 106:Nomoskedasticity 78: 56: 55: 33: 32: 26: 884: 883: 879: 878: 877: 875: 874: 873: 855:SegataSanshiro1 774:SegataSanshiro1 746: 669: 663: 631: 622: 616: 597: 562: 553: 547: 536:SegataSanshiro1 533: 521:SegataSanshiro1 507: 501: 494:; ā‰ˆ26/1 ratio. 484:search argument 449:SegataSanshiro1 446: 437: 431: 404:SegataSanshiro1 392: 386: 349: 330: 324: 296:SegataSanshiro1 268: 262: 242:SegataSanshiro1 208: 202: 183: 159: 153: 142: 127:Financial Times 102: 74: 30: 22: 21: 20: 12: 11: 5: 882: 880: 872: 871: 870: 869: 868: 867: 866: 865: 839: 838: 837: 836: 835: 834: 810: 809: 808: 807: 785: 784: 745: 742: 741: 740: 739: 738: 737: 736: 735: 734: 733: 732: 731: 730: 729: 728: 727: 726: 725: 724: 723: 722: 721: 720: 719: 718: 717: 716: 715: 714: 713: 712: 680: 639: 607:unique results 581: 376: 347: 346: 345: 344: 343: 342: 341: 340: 339: 338: 337: 282: 281: 280: 279: 278: 277: 276: 275: 232: 231: 230: 229: 228: 227: 218: 217: 216: 215: 115:New York Times 101: 98: 95: 94: 89: 84: 79: 72: 67: 62: 52: 51: 34: 23: 15: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 881: 864: 860: 856: 852: 847: 846: 845: 844: 843: 842: 841: 840: 833: 829: 825: 821: 816: 815: 814: 813: 812: 811: 806: 802: 798: 794: 793:WP:SOCK#LEGIT 789: 788: 787: 786: 783: 779: 775: 770: 769: 768: 767: 763: 759: 754: 750: 743: 711: 707: 703: 699: 695: 694: 693: 689: 685: 681: 677: 676: 675: 672: 666: 660: 654: 653: 652: 648: 644: 640: 635: 634:FoCuSandLeArN 630: 629: 628: 625: 619: 613: 608: 601: 596: 595: 594: 590: 586: 582: 580: 576: 572: 566: 565:FoCuSandLeArN 561: 560: 559: 556: 550: 544: 537: 532: 531: 530: 526: 522: 517: 516: 515: 514: 513: 510: 504: 498: 493: 489: 485: 480: 479: 478: 474: 470: 465: 460: 454: 453:FoCuSandLeArN 450: 445: 444: 443: 440: 434: 428: 420: 419:edit conflict 415: 414: 413: 409: 405: 400: 399: 398: 395: 389: 383: 377: 373: 372: 371: 367: 363: 359: 353: 352:FoCuSandLeArN 348: 336: 333: 327: 321: 315: 311: 307: 306: 305: 301: 297: 292: 291: 290: 289: 288: 287: 286: 285: 284: 283: 274: 271: 265: 259: 253: 252: 251: 247: 243: 238: 237: 236: 235: 234: 233: 224: 223: 222: 221: 220: 219: 214: 211: 205: 199: 194: 187: 182: 181: 180: 176: 172: 168: 167: 166: 165: 162: 156: 150: 137: 133: 128: 122: 120: 116: 112: 107: 99: 93: 90: 88: 85: 83: 80: 77: 73: 71: 68: 66: 63: 61: 58: 57: 49: 45: 41: 40: 35: 28: 27: 19: 747: 606: 605:you mean by 483: 458: 313: 309: 136:The Observer 135: 126: 123: 114: 103: 75: 43: 37: 670:talk to me! 623:talk to me! 554:talk to me! 508:talk to me! 438:talk to me! 393:talk to me! 331:talk to me! 269:talk to me! 209:talk to me! 160:talk to me! 104:I just saw 36:This is an 797:I A Huasca 758:I A Huasca 358:for others 749:This link 132:Kyle Bass 121:as well. 100:Copy edit 92:ArchiveĀ 7 87:ArchiveĀ 6 82:ArchiveĀ 5 76:ArchiveĀ 4 70:ArchiveĀ 3 65:ArchiveĀ 2 60:ArchiveĀ 1 664:contribs 617:contribs 548:contribs 502:contribs 432:contribs 387:contribs 325:contribs 263:contribs 203:contribs 154:contribs 39:archive 702:NickCT 684:NickCT 643:NickCT 600:NickCT 585:NickCT 571:NickCT 469:NickCT 464:WP:DUE 362:NickCT 659:FoCuS 612:FoCuS 543:FoCuS 497:FoCuS 427:FoCuS 382:FoCuS 320:FoCuS 258:FoCuS 198:FoCuS 193:WP:OR 149:FoCuS 16:< 859:talk 851:here 828:talk 801:talk 778:talk 762:talk 706:talk 698:here 688:talk 647:talk 589:talk 575:talk 525:talk 473:talk 451:and 408:talk 366:talk 300:talk 246:talk 175:talk 822:. 490:vs 314:now 861:) 853:. 830:) 803:) 780:) 764:) 756:-- 708:) 700:. 690:) 667:; 649:) 620:; 591:) 577:) 551:; 527:) 505:; 475:) 435:; 410:) 390:; 368:) 360:? 328:; 302:) 266:; 248:) 206:; 177:) 157:; 857:( 826:( 799:( 776:( 760:( 704:( 686:( 645:( 636:: 632:@ 602:: 598:@ 587:( 573:( 567:: 563:@ 538:: 534:@ 523:( 471:( 455:: 447:@ 421:) 417:( 406:( 364:( 354:: 350:@ 298:( 244:( 188:: 184:@ 173:( 50:.

Index

Talk:Paul Singer (businessman)
archive
current talk page
ArchiveĀ 1
ArchiveĀ 2
ArchiveĀ 3
ArchiveĀ 4
ArchiveĀ 5
ArchiveĀ 6
ArchiveĀ 7
Nomoskedasticity
accounts for less than 2%
Knowledge:Criticism
Kyle Bass
FoCuS
contribs
talk to me!
22:05, 30 November 2015 (UTC)
Nomoskedasticity
talk
07:20, 1 December 2015 (UTC)
Nomoskedasticity
WP:OR
FoCuS
contribs
talk to me!
18:17, 1 December 2015 (UTC)
SegataSanshiro1
talk
18:31, 1 December 2015 (UTC)

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