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| Tags: 1921, capablancalasker, game, repetition, wch |
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#11
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On Apr 22, 10:54 am, Taylor Kingston wrote:
The match went D-D-D-D-W-D-D-D-D-W-W-D-D-W, so there were two streaks of 4 draws in a row. Then, with the score 4-0 in Capa's favor, Lasker resigned the match, even though it had been planned to last up to 30 games, says Hannak. Besides feeling he had no chance to beat Capablanca, Lasker found the Havana heat unendurable, in fact he was hospitalized for some time after returning to Europe. Whoa! If GM Lasker were physically incapacitated while in Cuba, he would have been hospitalized there, per common sense. Only a reasonably well man would dare venture to cross the Atlantic back then -- or a darned fool, or a man running from something. Still, my other point remains to be answered; the one about obeying the rules of the game instead of cheating at will, as is the fashion today. I will leave that question to others, since its relevance to Lasker- Capablanca eludes me. It also seems to "elude" the apologists for modern GMs, who cheat this way virtually at will. 2. In a way, Capablanca already had "a lock on the title." Lasker had earlier resigned his World Championship title and given it to Capa. Therefore, technically, in this match Capablanca was the defending champion, Lasker the challenger. That's one take on the issue. No, it's an historical fact. For example the Hannak biography, page 195, says "Finally, after long and fruitless efforts to come to mutually satisfactory terms, Lasker threw quite a bombshell by publishing a statement solemnly renouncing his title for good and all." This was in 1920, I believe. You miss the point; when a world champion makes a public statement surrendering "his" title, the public is not compelled to go along willingly. Many writers have argued either side of this issue, some considering a verbal surrender binding, and others not. One might liken it to a surrender during wartime; sure, the hands are in the air, but until the prisoner is securely in a cage the possibilities are wide open. There is nothing to stop a man from later claiming he was somehow cheated, but an OTB victory usually quashes this possibility. My take is that such a "gift" of the title is quite the opposite; as we saw with GM Karpov "inheriting" the title from GM Fischer, the backlash can be worse than hell. The only surefire way to avoid this kind of thing is to beat the man, to be the man. Capablanca obviously felt the same way, and so pressed Lasker all the more, aided by popular opinion, and also by the hyper-inflation of German currency in the years immediately following WW I. This pretty much evaporated Lasker's savings, Really? I wasn't aware that he had accumulated any, as you call it, "savings". (snicker) so when a Havana casino offered him a minimum guarantee of $11,000, win or lose, Lasker could not afford to refuse. Also consider this: if GM Capablanca were really considered the title-holder before this match, why go to such lengths to try and play GM Lasker? You're right, Capablanca definitely wanted to win the title the right way, by beating Lasker. I was merely reporting the fact that Lasker *had* resigned the title before them match, and so, technically, Capa was *already* champion. Technically, there was no undisputed authority to decide such a matter back then; it was largely a matter of public opinion. Thank god for FIDE. (LOL!) Basically, in 1921 Lasker was burnt out. His play in the 1921 match was way below his usual standard. Everyone has a poor performance now and then; this is no proof of being burnt out. For such a proof we might look at GM Lasker's lifetime rating curve, searching for a final, sharp drop from which he never recovered. No, for proof of his being burnt out, we can simply turn to the testimony of those who knew him. Oh, gawd! This is like turning to Anthony Saidy to determine which chess columnist was the greatest of all time! LOL [GM Evans, he merely opined.] To cite Hannak again, ...is to reveal an uncanny ignorance of the bias of that writer. I recall reading a few of these books, one right after the other, and each of them twisted and distorted the facts willy-nilly to suit the subject at hand. I especially liked the way in which the Lasker/Capablanca dispute was handled. IMO, it was as clear as day that the world champion was in the wrong, and yet a whole slew of authors somehow managed to see things both ways, depending on which man was preordained to come out on top in the current paragraph or chapter. Rather than brandish the name "Hannak" like some formidable weapon, I should think a better move would be to bury it deep in the mud, where it rightfully belongs. page 196: "So Lasker went to Cuba to play the match, but he didn't feel very happy about it ... he was far from being imbued with indomitable fighting spirit that had carried through all his previous tests ..." Another source is GM Ossip Bernstein, who reported this conversation with Lasker shortly before he sailed for Havana: B: "Have you made any preparations for the match?" L: "No." I should prefer to know the facts on this matter, not hearsay anecdote. Is there any hard evidence that GM Lasker did not prepare at all? B: "Have you taken time out to rest?" L: "No." Ditto. B: "At least you are taking along a chessboard in order to study chess on the voyage?" L: "No." GM Capablanca's then-recent games were few, and his preferences in the openings could easily be committed to memory even by patzers like me. The man liked the QGD as Black, for instance. B: "Have you reviewed the openings you will play and studied the games of Capablanca?" L: "No." I would say that this is de facto evidence of lying. What chess player could resist the temptation of replaying GM Capablanca's most recent games? Perhaps if the man had been in the infantry, stuck in some foxhole... okay. If this laconic exchange does not indicate burn-out, then at least neither does it indicate enthusiasm. Good gawd; is this the standard of what you consider to be "evidence"? Mere anecdote? Is there some hidden reason for believing GM Lasker to be incapable of deceit in answering such questions? I'm all ears. The war had been hard on him, he was tired of chess, and after 27 years of him as champion, LOL Right -- we are to imagine that the poor man burned himself out with his multitudinous title defenses over the course of 27 years! LOL You have split that sentence improperly. It is a compound sentence, Uh-oh. This brings back memories (nightmares?) of my high school English classes, where students were forced (against their will, beyond any doubt) to diagram sentences. Funny thing is, afterwards I never, ever had an opportunity to make use of this "valuable" skill. Heck, I was so good at it that the teacher gave me her college textbook to look at, but it was full of more, useless stuff. the last sentence of which is "after 27 years of [Lasker] as champion, the chess world was pretty tired of him." Anyone well read in chess history knows this. What I do know is this: Jose Capablanca was cheated out of a shot at "Lasker's" title a long, long time before this over-hyped 27 (or 28, by some accounts) years were up. In essence, what was tiring was the desperate clinging on to the title by cowardly scumbags who were worthy of the title only in terms of playing strength, but little else. It is also tiring to watch this sort of thing play itself out; the more so when the young upstart would likely have lost anyway. The public gets tired of the same man winning all the time, they want to see a new face. Then change the challenger: Fischer/Petrosian 1-0 Fischer/Spassky 1-0 Fischer/Tal 1-0 Fischer/Botvinnik 1-0 Fischer/Keres 1-0 Fischer/Korthcnoi 1-0 Fischer/Taimanov 1-0 Fischer/Evans 1-0 Fischer/Parr 1-0 Fischer/Sloan 1-0 Fischer/Rob Mitchell 1-0 Fischer/Sanny 1-0 Okay, NOW I am getting tired of seeing this guy win! (Bring on Rybka 5.0.) Similar situations were Steinitz-Lasker 1894, Botvinnik-Tal 1960, Karpov-Kasparov 1985. And the public can be quite fickle; attending the 2003 Kasparov-Karpov Um, two Russians whose names sound alike playing in New York? This one is obvious. And IMO Chess Life could have done a much better job of trying to make these chess-athons look interesting to Americans. exhibition match in New York, I noticed that most of the crowd who expressed any favoritism were pro-Karpov, something unthinkable 20 years earlier. Again, an irrelevant anecdote in lieu of substantive evidence. the chess world was pretty tired of him. As IM Winston Churchill so succinctly put it: "Chess history is bunk". That was Henry Ford. No. Mr. Ford was only an FM, despite defeating NM Studebaker and WGM Deusenberg each, 6-0. In the Chicago Tribune of May 25, 1916, he said: "History is more or less bunk. It's tradition. We don't want tradition. Want to live in the present and the only history that is worth a tinker's damn is the history we make today." Yeah, but my point wasn't about what anyone "wants". It had more to do with the fact that history *is* bunk. -- help bot |
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#12
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On Apr 22, 8:52 pm, help bot wrote:
On Apr 22, 5:39 am, raylopez99 wrote: bot, have you seen the articles by chess statistician Jeff Sonas on the greatest champions ever? The research that 'backsolved' GW games using computers to show which GMs made the fewest errors (both in winning AND in losing games)? That showed Capa (and Lasker) and Kasparov (and Karpov) and Fischer (and Petrosian) to be the greatest players ever? No, I haven't seen it. Google it. Here, http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=2409 How do you "back solve" a game, anyway? How did the statistician decide which games to analyze, and which to exclude? This seems to allow for human bias to LEAP into the forefront. I would prefer a dufus (who has no clue how to manipulate numbers) to decide the matter, then enter the *competent* statisticians for the number-crunching part. Yes, a dufus is involved, no human input. Can I "back solve" my own games, or is there an upper limit as to how many blunders the algorithm can handle? ;D LOL. See the above. RL |
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#13
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help bot wrote:
Taylor Kingston wrote: Two points: 1. At that point in the match, neither player had won a game -- the first four were drawn. So one more draw at that point would not have helped Capablanca win the match. Hmm. I didn't realize they drew so many games in a row. Still, my other point remains to be answered; the one about obeying the rules of the game instead of cheating at will, as is the fashion today. Your `other point' isn't a point. For such a proof we might look at GM Lasker's lifetime rating curve, searching for a final, sharp drop from which he never recovered. There were no ratings in international chess in 1921. You can look at Sonas's figures if you want but his rating formula is fundamentally flawed. Dave. -- David Richerby Strange Wine (TM): it's like a vintage www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ Beaujolais but it's totally weird! |
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#14
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Taylor Kingston wrote:
help bot wrote: Taylor Kingston wrote: 2. In a way, Capablanca already had "a lock on the title." Lasker had earlier resigned his World Championship title and given it to Capa. That's one take on the issue. No, it's an historical fact. For example the Hannak biography, page 195, says "Finally, after long and fruitless efforts to come to mutually satisfactory terms, Lasker threw quite a bombshell by publishing a statement solemnly renouncing his title for good and all." This was in 1920, I believe. But did anyone take this seriously? In the eyes of the world, was it any more legitimate for Lasker to say, ``I'm not World Champion any mo Capablanca is'' than it would have been for Capa to say, ``He's not World Champion any mo I am''? You're right, Capablanca definitely wanted to win the title the right way, by beating Lasker. I was merely reporting the fact that Lasker *had* resigned the title before them match, and so, technically, Capa was *already* champion. Capa was already champion in Lasker's opinion. I'm not sure anyone else really agreed with him. Dave. -- David Richerby Homicidal Devil Atom Bomb (TM): it's www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ like a weapon of mass destruction that's possessed by Satan but it wants to kill you! |
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#15
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raylopez99 wrote:
bot, have you seen the articles by chess statistician Jeff Sonas on the greatest champions ever? The research that 'backsolved' GW games using computers to show which GMs made the fewest errors (both in winning AND in losing games)? That showed Capa (and Lasker) and Kasparov (and Karpov) and Fischer (and Petrosian) to be the greatest players ever? Well, it's good to know that almost half the World Champions have been the greatest players ever. Must really suck to be Steinitz (or Alekhine) or Euwe (or Botvinnik) or Smyslov (or Tal) or Spassky (or Kramnik). Dave. -- David Richerby Poetic Surprise Book (TM): it's like www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ a romantic novel but not like you'd expect and it's in verse! |
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#16
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Good Lord, bot, when it comes to ignorant rants, you've posted some doozies, but I think this one may take the cake. Just about everything you write below is nonsense, but especially foolish, not to say insulting, is your characterization of Lasker as an "over-hyped cowardly scumbag." It's become painfully obvious that you post here not because you have anything worth saying, you just like to hear yourself talk. I apologize to the group for trying one last time take you seriously. On Apr 23, 12:53 am, help bot wrote: On Apr 22, 10:54 am, Taylor Kingston wrote: The match went D-D-D-D-W-D-D-D-D-W-W-D-D-W, so there were two streaks of 4 draws in a row. Then, with the score 4-0 in Capa's favor, Lasker resigned the match, even though it had been planned to last up to 30 games, says Hannak. Besides feeling he had no chance to beat Capablanca, Lasker found the Havana heat unendurable, in fact he was hospitalized for some time after returning to Europe. Whoa! If GM Lasker were physically incapacitated while in Cuba, he would have been hospitalized there, per common sense. Only a reasonably well man would dare venture to cross the Atlantic back then -- or a darned fool, or a man running from something. Still, my other point remains to be answered; the one about obeying the rules of the game instead of cheating at will, as is the fashion today. I will leave that question to others, since its relevance to Lasker- Capablanca eludes me. It also seems to "elude" the apologists for modern GMs, who cheat this way virtually at will. 2. In a way, Capablanca already had "a lock on the title." Lasker had earlier resigned his World Championship title and given it to Capa. Therefore, technically, in this match Capablanca was the defending champion, Lasker the challenger. That's one take on the issue. No, it's an historical fact. For example the Hannak biography, page 195, says "Finally, after long and fruitless efforts to come to mutually satisfactory terms, Lasker threw quite a bombshell by publishing a statement solemnly renouncing his title for good and all." This was in 1920, I believe. You miss the point; when a world champion makes a public statement surrendering "his" title, the public is not compelled to go along willingly. Many writers have argued either side of this issue, some considering a verbal surrender binding, and others not. One might liken it to a surrender during wartime; sure, the hands are in the air, but until the prisoner is securely in a cage the possibilities are wide open. There is nothing to stop a man from later claiming he was somehow cheated, but an OTB victory usually quashes this possibility. My take is that such a "gift" of the title is quite the opposite; as we saw with GM Karpov "inheriting" the title from GM Fischer, the backlash can be worse than hell. The only surefire way to avoid this kind of thing is to beat the man, to be the man. Capablanca obviously felt the same way, and so pressed Lasker all the more, aided by popular opinion, and also by the hyper-inflation of German currency in the years immediately following WW I. This pretty much evaporated Lasker's savings, Really? I wasn't aware that he had accumulated any, as you call it, "savings". (snicker) so when a Havana casino offered him a minimum guarantee of $11,000, win or lose, Lasker could not afford to refuse. Also consider this: if GM Capablanca were really considered the title-holder before this match, why go to such lengths to try and play GM Lasker? You're right, Capablanca definitely wanted to win the title the right way, by beating Lasker. I was merely reporting the fact that Lasker *had* resigned the title before them match, and so, technically, Capa was *already* champion. Technically, there was no undisputed authority to decide such a matter back then; it was largely a matter of public opinion. Thank god for FIDE. (LOL!) Basically, in 1921 Lasker was burnt out. His play in the 1921 match was way below his usual standard. Everyone has a poor performance now and then; this is no proof of being burnt out. For such a proof we might look at GM Lasker's lifetime rating curve, searching for a final, sharp drop from which he never recovered. No, for proof of his being burnt out, we can simply turn to the testimony of those who knew him. Oh, gawd! This is like turning to Anthony Saidy to determine which chess columnist was the greatest of all time! LOL [GM Evans, he merely opined.] To cite Hannak again, ...is to reveal an uncanny ignorance of the bias of that writer. I recall reading a few of these books, one right after the other, and each of them twisted and distorted the facts willy-nilly to suit the subject at hand. I especially liked the way in which the Lasker/Capablanca dispute was handled. IMO, it was as clear as day that the world champion was in the wrong, and yet a whole slew of authors somehow managed to see things both ways, depending on which man was preordained to come out on top in the current paragraph or chapter. Rather than brandish the name "Hannak" like some formidable weapon, I should think a better move would be to bury it deep in the mud, where it rightfully belongs. page 196: "So Lasker went to Cuba to play the match, but he didn't feel very happy about it ... he was far from being imbued with indomitable fighting spirit that had carried through all his previous tests ..." Another source is GM Ossip Bernstein, who reported this conversation with Lasker shortly before he sailed for Havana: B: "Have you made any preparations for the match?" L: "No." I should prefer to know the facts on this matter, not hearsay anecdote. Is there any hard evidence that GM Lasker did not prepare at all? B: "Have you taken time out to rest?" L: "No." Ditto. B: "At least you are taking along a chessboard in order to study chess on the voyage?" L: "No." GM Capablanca's then-recent games were few, and his preferences in the openings could easily be committed to memory even by patzers like me. The man liked the QGD as Black, for instance. B: "Have you reviewed the openings you will play and studied the games of Capablanca?" L: "No." I would say that this is de facto evidence of lying. What chess player could resist the temptation of replaying GM Capablanca's most recent games? Perhaps if the man had been in the infantry, stuck in some foxhole... okay. If this laconic exchange does not indicate burn-out, then at least neither does it indicate enthusiasm. Good gawd; is this the standard of what you consider to be "evidence"? Mere anecdote? Is there some hidden reason for believing GM Lasker to be incapable of deceit in answering such questions? I'm all ears. The war had been hard on him, he was tired of chess, and after 27 years of him as champion, LOL Right -- we are to imagine that the poor man burned himself out with his multitudinous title defenses over the course of 27 years! LOL You have split that sentence improperly. It is a compound sentence, Uh-oh. This brings back memories (nightmares?) of my high school English classes, where students were forced (against their will, beyond any doubt) to diagram sentences. Funny thing is, afterwards I never, ever had an opportunity to make use of this "valuable" skill. Heck, I was so good at it that the teacher gave me her college textbook to look at, but it was full of more, useless stuff. the last sentence of which is "after 27 years of [Lasker] as champion, the chess world was pretty tired of him." Anyone well read in chess history knows this. What I do know is this: Jose Capablanca was cheated out of a shot at "Lasker's" title a long, long time before this over-hyped 27 (or 28, by some accounts) years were up. In essence, what was tiring was the desperate clinging on to the title by cowardly scumbags who were worthy of the title only in terms of playing strength, but little else. It is also tiring to watch this sort of thing play itself out; the more so when the young upstart would likely have lost anyway. The public gets tired of the same man winning all the time, they want to see a new face. Then change the challenger: Fischer/Petrosian 1-0 Fischer/Spassky 1-0 Fischer/Tal 1-0 Fischer/Botvinnik 1-0 Fischer/Keres 1-0 Fischer/Korthcnoi 1-0 Fischer/Taimanov 1-0 Fischer/Evans 1-0 Fischer/Parr 1-0 Fischer/Sloan 1-0 Fischer/Rob Mitchell 1-0 Fischer/Sanny 1-0 Okay, NOW I am getting tired of seeing this guy win! (Bring on Rybka 5.0.) Similar situations were Steinitz-Lasker 1894, Botvinnik-Tal 1960, Karpov-Kasparov 1985. And the public can be quite fickle; attending the 2003 Kasparov-Karpov Um, two Russians whose names sound alike playing in New York? This one is obvious. And IMO Chess Life could have done a much better job of trying to make these chess-athons look interesting to Americans. exhibition match in New York, I noticed that most of the crowd who expressed any favoritism were pro-Karpov, something unthinkable 20 years earlier. Again, an irrelevant anecdote in lieu of substantive evidence. the chess world was pretty tired of him. As IM Winston Churchill so succinctly put it: "Chess history is bunk". That was Henry Ford. No. Mr. Ford was only an FM, despite defeating NM Studebaker and WGM Deusenberg each, 6-0. In the Chicago Tribune of May 25, 1916, he said: "History is more or less bunk. It's tradition. We don't want tradition. Want to live in the present and the only history that is worth a tinker's damn is the history we make today." Yeah, but my point wasn't about what anyone "wants". It had more to do with the fact that history *is* bunk. -- help bot |
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#17
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In article .com,
help bot wrote: On Apr 22, 10:54 am, Taylor Kingston wrote: The match went D-D-D-D-W-D-D-D-D-W-W-D-D-W, so there were two streaks of 4 draws in a row. Then, with the score 4-0 in Capa's favor, Lasker resigned the match, even though it had been planned to last up to 30 games, says Hannak. Besides feeling he had no chance to beat Capablanca, Lasker found the Havana heat unendurable, in fact he was hospitalized for some time after returning to Europe. Whoa! If GM Lasker were physically incapacitated while in Cuba, he would have been hospitalized there, Unless, of course, the problem was the Cuban climate, and he had to get away from it. No air conditioning back then. -- Christopher Mattern NOTICE Thank you for noticing this new notice Your noticing it has been noted And will be reported to the authorities |
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#18
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On Apr 23, 12:05 pm, (Chris Mattern) wrote:
In article .com, help bot wrote: On Apr 22, 10:54 am, Taylor Kingston wrote: The match went D-D-D-D-W-D-D-D-D-W-W-D-D-W, so there were two streaks of 4 draws in a row. Then, with the score 4-0 in Capa's favor, Lasker resigned the match, even though it had been planned to last up to 30 games, says Hannak. Besides feeling he had no chance to beat Capablanca, Lasker found the Havana heat unendurable, in fact he was hospitalized for some time after returning to Europe. Whoa! If GM Lasker were physically incapacitated while in Cuba, he would have been hospitalized there, Unless, of course, the problem was the Cuban climate, and he had to get away from it. No air conditioning back then. Exactly so. |
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#19
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On Apr 23, 4:03 am, David Richerby
wrote: raylopez99 wrote: bot, have you seen the articles by chess statistician Jeff Sonas on the greatest champions ever? The research that 'backsolved' GW games using computers to show which GMs made the fewest errors (both in winning AND in losing games)? That showed Capa (and Lasker) and Kasparov (and Karpov) and Fischer (and Petrosian) to be the greatest players ever? Well, it's good to know that almost half the World Champions have been the greatest players ever. Must really suck to be Steinitz (or Alekhine) or Euwe (or Botvinnik) or Smyslov (or Tal) or Spassky (or Kramnik). Dave. -- David Richerby Poetic Surprise Book (TM): it's likewww.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ a romantic novel but not like you'd expect and it's in verse! I confused Sonas article (see this thread, he http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=2409 ), which actually concluded the best four players ever were Kasparov, Karpov, Lasker and Capa, with another study. Curious why you think Sonas formulae are flawed (if that's what you meant). RL |
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#20
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On Apr 23, 6:05 am, David Richerby
wrote: Hmm. I didn't realize they drew so many games in a row. Still, my other point remains to be answered; the one about obeying the rules of the game instead of cheating at will, as is the fashion today. Your `other point' isn't a point. Mere assertion noted. Next time, bring back-up! For such a proof we might look at GM Lasker's lifetime rating curve, searching for a final, sharp drop from which he never recovered. There were no ratings in international chess in 1921. You figured that out all by yourself, did you? Obviously, I was referring to things like Arpad Eo's famous book, which rated such events as all the world championships, retroactively. When graphed, these performance ratings often reveal surprising patterns, sans empty rhetoric and press agenda biases. You can look at Sonas's figures if you want but his rating formula is fundamentally flawed. Wouldn't surprise me. I have found many statistical analysis to be the same as history: bunk. -- help bot |
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