Public Shaming Bombshell
While researching Harrison Arkansas' checkered racial history, I came across several surprises; but none bigger than the latest bombshell - the public shaming of a community. "If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck"
Public shaming is generally associated with individuals, and private and public entities. "The speed at which information can travel, the frequency of anonymous shaming, the size of the audience it can reach, and the permanence of the information separate digital shaming from shaming of the past.”
Public shaming can generally be discounted when it comes from unreliable sources, but when it comes from respected new services - AP News and KUAF - NPR Fayetteville, respected social media - Wikipedia, and a respected research source - Southern Poverty Law Center it's nearly insurmountable.
My research approach was to verify any reports and summaries from experts by going directly to the sources. "Reliable" news sources appears to be using the shorthand method, explained in next segment.
I was alerted to the technique used by the "experts" by the editor of the Arkansas Online Encyclopedia in a newspaper interview. "Understand why the people of Harrison feel picked upon, they (Harrison) have become the shorthand; not just for sundown towns but for small-town racism as a whole."
When limited to print media, it had minimal impact; but now with the Internet, articles are accessible 24/7 globally. "More than half the world’s population sees AP content every day." There's urgency to getting information correct the first time. Credibility and survival are at stake, if errors are not corrected. Articles live forever.
The Gibson’s Bakery, a family-owned business near Oberlin College accused of racism, just won a big payout. Public shaming using false information now has national interests and financial ramifications. In the past, the question has been, what can we do, other than draw additional attention? Now there are other considerations gaining traction.
Associated Press, famous last words "We stand by our original reporting"
Do your own due diligence; I would like your input - it can be confidential or as public feedback.
Herb Lair, Senior Business Development Consultant, Cell or text (870) 365-5436 [email protected]
My findings:
- There is no visible effort by AP News, SPLC, KUAF - NPR Fayetteville, to correct and update racial or white supremacists information on Harrison, Arkansas, after several requests. They have used Harrison as the shorthand for small-town racism. Only persistent pressure to the highest level will create change. They will be monitored and challenged.
- AP News' continued use of errors, even after they were notified, has cost Harrison tens of millions if not hundreds of millions in business, and economic development. More on that later. "More than half the world’s population sees AP content every day"
- Ku Klux Klan headed by Tom Robb, changed name to Knights Party legally in 2012; but every reference by AP since then includes Harrison as headquarters of KKK, do your own search to verify. It's significant that Anti-Defamation League (ADL), and others, no longer recognizes them as KKK, and Harrison as headquarters. Neo-NAZI and KKK are a major concern of ADL.
- New York Post: "Years ago, the group Robb heads near Harrison, Arkansas, changed its name from the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan to the Knights Party USA, mainly to get away from the stigma associated with the Klan name. It now presents itself as more of a political or Christian entity." (strategy is explained below)
- “There is a lot of baggage with the name,” said Rachel Pendergraft, Robb’s daughter, who leads the group with him. “You say the name ‘KKK’ and a lot of people have a narrative in their minds of what it is about, what it does. The name resonates with people, whether it is good or whether it is bad.” https://nypost.com/2016/06/30/the-ku-klux-klan-is-slowly-rising-again/
- Federal and state government legally allows Tom Robb and his enterprises to be nonprofit,as far as taxes; and use all Federal services - mail, streaming video, freedom of speech. If AP and others wants to continue calling Harrison the headquarters of the KKK, I would suggest AP or any news group still referring to them as KKK, request an audit from all Tom Robb non-tax and taxable enterprises to determine any "for profit" violations from continued use of KKK name for memberships and selling inventory. Robb's son is an attorney, and he uses a reputable tax and investment service in Harrison.
- Locally all criminal violations by KKK members have been actively prosecuted to the highest level. Robb has made a public effort to dissociate himself from them. Fake videos have been recorded in locations outside Boone County, and presented with a Harrison tagline.
Again making point the "KKK" has absolutely no presence in Boone County, other than PR windfalls provided from news media to the immediate Tom Robb family (aka Knights Party USA)
- Located in Zinc near each other "Deputy prosecutor Chris Carter said he believed Lewis (The Ku Klux Klan LLC and Christian Identity Ministries Inc.) had split from the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, which was founded by Thom Robb of rural Boone County. "Those two had a falling out," said Carter. "Floyd Lewis was not affiliated with us in any way, nor I with him," Robb said via email. "In fact when he was arrested I provided Michigan court documents to the Boone County Sheriff's Department regarding an earlier conviction he had for child molestation in which he served time. I provided this to the sheriff's department with the hopes it would help secure a conviction and a sentence from which he could not walk away. I am quite happy that this man has been taken off the streets." According to the Arkansas secretary of state's office, Lewis incorporated both The Ku Klux Klan LLC and Christian Identity Ministries Inc. in 2003. Investigators from the Boone County sheriff's office were notified in February that a 13-year-old girl had been sexually assaulted. Carter described the second-degree assault as "inappropriate touching."
- Arkansas Democrat Gazette has been helpful in identifying research resources - SPLC and Encyclopedia of Arkansas, and NPR Fayetteville editing Harrison/Boone County profile. But could be more helpful with AP News, SPLC, and KUAF and their continued false attacks on Harrison.
- Attempting to correct Wikipedia led me to its resource source SPLC, and how dependent social and mainstream media are on them.
- Wikipedia has made some corrections, still more need to be made.
- Guy Lancaster, editor of that online Arkansas encyclopedia, understands why the people of Harrison feel picked upon."They have become kind of the shorthand not just for sundown towns but for small-town racism as a whole,"
- Racist accusations which can't be proven and defended are drawing national attention, and are becoming expensive mistakes.
- Oberlin College waited too long to make a simple correction and apology.
- Gibson’s Bakery, a family-owned business near Oberlin College accused of racism, won a big payout.
All my findings are supported by multiple sources, unlike the following:
AP News public shaming of Harrison Arkansas
https://apnews.com/cec9849da0fc43898d753714023857a0
Excerpts from AP News, click above to get complete article
1. "The largest town, Harrison, population 13,000, was the site of riots in the early 1900s (happened in all cities with black population in South, including North Arkansas and Southern Missouri, Harrison with only one death considered minor to others, no matter there was a railroad bankruptcy eliminating jobs, name one city with blacks in South that didn’t have racial skirmishes after Civil War?)
2. that drove out most of its black population (might check black percentage of population in Northern Arkansas and Southern Missouri comparable cities in 2019, and their past histories of lynchings to intimidate blacks; minimal differences exists today in black population percentages -The U.S. Census of 1900 revealed a black community in Harrison of 115 people out of 1,501 residents. Many were single blacks living in tents that lost jobs due to railroad bankruptcy).
3. The Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, one of several Klan factions, (Since 2012 Ku Klux Klan name was dropped by national director (national resistance to using KKK) and now only referred to by "Knights Party" - check all their benefits from Federal Government - nonprofit, use of post office, video streaming, freedom of speech,etc, another KKK corporation LLC filing was revoked in same town, Zinc AR)
4. and the white supremacist Kingdom Identity Ministries are based in the Harrison area (KIM founder in bad health, missing in action, KIM never was in action at listed Harrison address, from California? The founder of Christian Identity Ministries, located in Zinc AR, is in prison for child pornography).
5. The Klan (change to Knights Party so why is AP News still using Klan?) uses a Harrison post office box for its mailing address, while its national director lives a short drive outside town (he, Thomas Robb, is in financial survival mode, laying low, as a grandparent, depending on money from church pastor salary and contributions, and protecting KKK funds? Not likely P.O. Box is used for mass mailings, due to costs, mainly uses the Internet).
6. In recent years, billboards occasionally have appeared with white supremacist messages such as, “Anti-racist is a code word for anti-white,” or promoting a white pride website (lot of local opposition not reported, the billboard snafu caused by British tabloid using SPLC fake hate groups research, calling Harrison the most racists city in US was all false and manufactured hate groups by one person, Tom Robb - purpose was to draw attention and sell KKK inventory for profit by nonprofit corporation, even the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) only gave it a brief mention "the Arkansas-based Knights Party drew attention after sponsoring a racist billboard in their home state", they dropped KKK, and Harrison while AP News still keeps it).
7. “Once they get a toehold people follow them in there (not now, maybe 50 years ago),” said Heidi Beirich, director of the Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC donations increase when they find more hate groups, so Robb was happy to oblige, with additional manufactured hate groups with no verification), referring to the remote, wooded area (with Arkansas ranks 48th in broadband, white supremacist prefer urban areas with high speed broadband. They are in locations where society has its way of irritating them on a daily basis.).
8. The group tracked 14 hate groups in Arkansas last year (The five in Harrison area have been easily disproved- Robb family is it, but he's a pastor of a church for nonprofit purposes, is he part of a hate group for profit?).
The Oberlin College and Gibson's Bakery lawsuit and defamation award seem minor to all the issues Harrison has experienced. Very helpful creating my thoughts on how expensive, wrongful public shaming can be to businesses and communities.
Time for Corrections!!
Day of reckoning has arrived for those falsely labeling communities or businesses as racists. There's a long list of important issues:
1. Truth is important
2. Failure to recognize the collateral damage to businesses in a falsely accused "racist" community has unlimited financial liabilities.
3. Failure to provide balanced reporting.
4. Generalizations and, even worse, singling out the same community, without reason, must be avoided.
5. Defamation and economic boycotts are real when the "legitimate" media makes disparaging comments or publishes poorly researched articles that are false and damaging. https://apnews.com/cec9849da0fc43898d753714023857a0
6. Free speech does not mean an absence of consequences.
7. False racism accusations should not happen to anyone, but could happen to everyone
8. Due to recent national events, our society and its powerful institutions are becoming faster to recognize the toll extracted by defamation.
Wow!! AP News has violated every important issue I have listed - unfortunately NPR, SPLC, and other publications have been unwilling to do their job either, and copycat each other as "trusted" sources. Fortunately Wikipedia is moving in the right direction. Must understand the liabilities!
Wikipedia public shaming of Harrison:
August 18, 2019, profile stated “Race riots by whites in 1905 and 1909 drove away black residents, establishing Harrison as a sundown town. Today (2019) it is known as the center of white supremacist activity, including the national headquarters of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.”
Improved to
November 14, 2019 Profile states “The predominantly white community is noted for its history of racism, which includes two race riots in the early 20th century and an influx of white supremacist activity in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.”
Still needs improving.
You can look at all the race riots around northern Arkansas and southern Missouri, Little Rock Central ’57, Tulsa, and even the northern city race riots of ’68, and none have received the public shaming on the front profile page of Wikipedia that Harrison has. Do a search on them and prove me wrong! Harrison’s riots were mainly about jobs due to railroad bankruptcy. Again only resulted in one reported death.
Wikipedia buries this in the history section of Monett, Pierce City, and Rogers, Ark. - a lynching and race riot in took place in Monett before the violence spread to Pierce City and other southwestern Missouri towns. Monett became a sundown town, banning African Americans from living or staying there after dark, with a sign across the main street saying: "N_____, don't let the sun go down."[12][13] "Monett, Pierce City, Rogers, Ark., and several other towns around here have driven the Negros out."[14]
State Paper public shaming of Harrison over Wikipedia
Are they drinking the AP News and social media Kool-Aid?
August 12, 2019 Article – Site’s entries won’t let city shed its past (Harrison tries to remove ties to Klan from Wikipedia) by Bill Bowden --Worth a read - lot of good info, but needs some followup - editorial on August 18th was disappointing
Importance – “Wikipedia gets 18 billion page views and about 500 million unique visitors a month. Harrison averages 293 per day.
Article mentions Harrison’s race related task force was formed in 2003. Explains the nuts and bolts of attempting to correct Wikipedia information about Harrison.
“The author of the Encyclopedia of Arkansas' entry on the Harrison race riots was Guy Lancaster, who is editor of that online encyclopedia.
But Lancaster said he understands why the people of Harrison feel picked upon. "They have become kind of the shorthand not just for sundown towns but for small-town racism as a whole," he said.”
Key point is made by Lancaster who recognizes Harrison has been made the “shorthand” for public shaming.
This should never happen with all the financial consequences.
How can state media and other mainstream media journalists not recognize that point? Obviously “fair and balanced” have caught the last train to the coast with “slim and none”.
“Don Heider, executive director of the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara University in California, said Wikipedia admits that it's not a reliable source of information. "Instead of an encyclopedia, which writes with some authority and checks accuracy, Wikipedia depends entirely upon volunteers to make entries and
corrections," he said. "I think the folks in Harrison might be better served by first getting the information corrected on the Southern Poverty Law Center's website...”
This was great information finding the source for research was Southern Poverty Law Center or SPLC. Similar information for public shaming is being used by Google, YouTube, AP News, and other mainstream media.
I call it the “Perry Mason” moment when I found Tom Robb and KKK needed SPLC and KLAN needed them. The more hate groups that SPLC can find the more contributions, while Robb gets a windfall with minimum effort and expense. His efforts to manipulate SPLC started in 1984 at Montgomery, and continues today.
Excerpt from Arkansas Democrat Gazette news article -- City IT Manager David Wilson
"We are a county of small communities that are welcoming of all people, regardless of race, gender, religion or nationality," he wrote in a section regarding the Wikipedia page changes. "The KKK is not regarded here and we want to encourage people to move here and visit. We know how popular Wikipedia is but this stains the community with negative exposure and we want to keep it positive."
Four hours later, Jacona added the sentences back in that Wilson had cut from the Boone County Wikipedia entry, citing two magazine articles, a Public Broadcasting Service documentary and KUAF, the National Public Radio station based in Fayetteville.”
Pilling on from Fayetteville KUAF Public Radio needs some media attention
Since NPR's correspondent has written several negative historical reports on Harrison, there appears some self interest that the media should investigate.
My contact :Jacqueline Froelich, Senior News Producer KUAF Public Radio 91.3FM https://kuaf.com/ Station-based Correspondent for NPR https://www.npr.org/ Another clue that University of Arkansas and NPR were involved in negatives about Harrison and Boone County – Not good after seeing the results of the recent lawsuit between Oberlin College and Gibson's Bakery.
The article gave a lot of good investigative information, but there should be more follow-up on the key sources discovered.
August 18, 2018 Editorial No Satisfaction (Harrison frustrated by references to ugly past) Unfortunate that the editors failed to read their papers' August 12, 2019 Article
“The author of the Encyclopedia of Arkansas' entry on the Harrison race riots was Guy Lancaster, who is editor of that online encyclopedia. But Lancaster said he understands why the people of Harrison feel picked upon. "They have become kind of the shorthand not just for sundown towns but for small-town racism as a whole," he said.”
Key point is made by Lancaster who recognizes Harrison has been made the “shorthand” for public shaming.
Points by editors incorrectly assuming Wikipedia as accurate, with condescending tone:
- “Something from the past, however, is holding Harrison back. And Wikipedia is, at least in part, getting the blame.”
- “Harrison really does deserve to be known by more than its past and its lingering KKK connection, fueled largely by a KKK leader's residency in a town about 15 miles from Harrison. That leader uses a Harrison post office box for correspondence.”
- “Harrison has come a long way. But nobody can or should just pretend that the past didn't happen. Trying to erase history is a fool's errand. History fights to be remembered. Forgetting it is something done at the community's own peril.”
- “They say the best revenge is living well. That's what this community in Boone County has to do. Harrison in 2019 has a story to tell. It's naive to suggest the town is the same as it was in the early 1900s.”
"What’s the point?
The city of Harrison will have to overcome its unwanted past by what its residents say and do today, not by erasing references on Wikipedia."
The point is obvious, and it’s not the one above!
Harrison race riots were unfortunate, but much less news worthy than virtually all other race riots since the Civil War. Don't put footnote or back page news permanently on the front page!
Guy Lancaster, who is editor of that online Arkansas encyclopedia, put it best, he understands why the people of Harrison feel picked upon. "They have become kind of the shorthand not just for sundown towns but for small-town racism as a whole," he said.”
In today’s language – Harrison has been chosen too many times for public shaming. We now live in a society willing to take on the media and assign blame and cost.
KUAF Senior News Producer – NPR Correspondent Public Shaming of Harrison
Jacqueline Froelich Senior News Producer KUAF Public Radio 91.3FM https://kuaf.com/ Station-based Correspondent for NPR https://www.npr.org/
Total Eclipse: The Destruction of the African American Community of Harrison, Arkansas, in 1905 and 1909 JACQUELINE FROELICH and DAVID
"Arkansas Ozarks African Americans" also unearths, for the first time, events leading up to the (1) ethnic cleansing of Harrison, Arkansas beginning in 1905--a history that remained buried for almost a century--chronicles a (2) mass lynching in nearby Springfield, Missouri, and sheds new light on a race war which destroyed the prosperous black district of Tulsa, Oklahoma, (3) killing hundreds.”
Interesting when you search Rogers, Arkansas and get the Wikipedia description, you have to dig real deep to get: "The number of African Americans living in Rogers is very low. In the early twentieth century Rogers was a sundown town. "Monett, Pierce City, Rogers, Ark., and several other towns around here have driven the negroes out."[9]" But that's not ethnic cleansing, as well as other North Arkansas cities with comparable low percentage of blacks?
I take strong exception to the use of “racial cleansing” and “violently purged”, and even “settled in Boone County” descriptions.
"Only one person was killed during the riots, in 1905, but the fear of lynching, especially in 1909, motivated black residents to flee" from the Encyclopedia of Arkansas https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/lynching-346/ If you check the Encyclopedia table of recorded lynchings, you will find Boone County was one of the least mentioned, falling well behind Washington and Pulaski County. "Racial cleansing" and "violently purged" in Boone County never came close to other events identified by noted historians in other parts of Arkansas, the US, and international. Only you and Zimmermann in your published article ever used it.
How do you commit ethnic cleansing when "settled in Boone County" can only be tracked for hardly 5 or at most 10 years? Primarily for jobs created by a railroad that went bankrupt prior to the riots.
Other interesting point is excerpt August 12, 2019 Article – Site’s entries won’t let city shed its past (Harrison tries to remove ties to Klan from Wikipedia) by Bill Bowden – came from Fayetteville NPR – when history not that much different than Harrison Boone County?
Four hours later, Jacona added the sentences back in that Wilson had cut from the Boone County Wikipedia entry, citing two magazine articles, a Public Broadcasting Service documentary and KUAF, the National Public Radio station based in Fayetteville.”
Just another example of public shaming from a hypocritical neighbor?
Southern Poverty Law Center public shaming of Harrison
SPLC has no intent of an accurate accounting of hate groups. It is to their benefit to have as many as possible. Their ability to raise contributions is highly dependent on increasing hate groups, even if it includes conservative churches.
Check following five hate groups identified by SPLC in Harrison area.Might check accuracy in your area as well.
1. Christian Revival Center (Christian Identity) https://christianidentitychurch.net/ CHRISTIAN REVIVAL CENTER - LOVE GOD AND LOVE YOUR PEOPLE PO BOX 602, HARRISON, AR USA [email protected] – PASTOR THOMAS ROBB
Location is at the Knights compound in Zinc, message from a softer and gentler Thomas Robb. Have there been any indication of recent hate crimes as a result of his preaching?
Should no longer be considered a Harrison area hate group -
2. Kingdom Identity Ministries (Christian Identity)
- No longer active in Harrison, other than possible use of post office.
- Haven't been here in years!!
- Kingdom Identity Ministries
- 309 North Chestnut Street - unrelated business has been at location for over 10 years
- Harrison, AR 72601
- Phone: (870) 741-1119
- Web: www.kingidentity.com
- It functions primarily as a publishing house, churning out Identity Bible study courses, tracts and books, including foundation texts by early Identity leaders like Wesley Swift.
- Late 2017 - Messages - Mike Hallimore, the founder of Kingdom Identity Ministries, is seriously ill in hospital. Please pray that Yahweh sends His Word and heals him.
- Late 2017 - I'm pleased to announce that Mike is now out of hospital and on the mend. Praise Yahweh! He recounts what happened to him in the latest edition of Kingdom Concepts.
- Posted 14 February 2018 - 10:23 PM Mike is back in hospital with a bad heart. Please keep him in your prayers
- No KIM filings with State Secretary of State - last known residence for Mike Hallimore was in Newton County.
- Hallimore leads a solitary existence on his 62 acres outside of Jasper, Ark. Most nights he stays up into the wee hours, working on sermons and writing to members of prison gangs.
- He's missing in action as far as being seen in Harrison.
Floyd M. Lewis incorporator/organizer of Christian Identity Ministries - located on 6333 Zinc Road is in prison
HDT "Lewis has a telephone number listed in his name for the Ku Klux Klan, LLC. Today, the number went straight to voicemail, which directed callers to a website where KKK paraphernalia could be purchased.
The Boone County sheriff, Mike Moore, told Hatewatch today that his department was initially asked several days ago to assist the Arkansas State Police investigating a crime against children case. A tip had come in, according to the Daily Times, that Lewis was growing marijuana in his home, selling prescription medications and allegedly taking naked pictures of the 13-year-old."
Although not officially a hate crime, just shows local and state police continually monitor the situation
Status revoked on The Ku Klux Klan - again Floyd Lewis - located on Zinc Road near Robb
Kingdom Identity Ministries - no corporate filing on record - Arkansas
- Kingdom Identity Ministries (KIM) is a Christian Identity outreach ministry
- No longer active at Harrison Arkansas address on 309 North Chestnut Street. Which is less than a block from 911 Call Center. Building at 309 N Chestnut has been owned for several years by a chiropractor (see picture above). That was KIM's last Harrison address several years ago
Should not be considered a Harrison area hate group – never more than a publishing house - in prison, got other issues
3. Knights of the Ku Klux Klan (Ku Klux Klan)
- Thom Robb, national director of The Knights of the Ku Klux Klan – which now goes by The Knights Party – and his daughter, Rachel Pendergraft, say their Arkansas-based organization wants to safeguard its people and heritage
- Anti-Defamation League (ADL) - now refers to Robb’s hate group as Arkansas-based Knights Party, they don’t even mention Robb or location in their comprehensive report on the KKK in US.
- https://www.adl.org/education/resources/reports/state-of-the-kkk
ADL is Jewish slanted and have to be considered the ultimate source for identifying and locating neo nazi KKK locations of significance. while the Arkansas-based Knights Party drew attention after sponsoring a rascist billboard in their home state"
Both the IRS and the nonprofit corporation are required to disclose the information they provide on Form 990 to the public. This means that nonprofits must make their records available for public inspection during regular business hours at their principal office.
SPLC gets contributions based on increasing number of hate groups, and ADL doesn't.
Locally there was a change in 2012 to match national change to avoid lawsuits
Officially they have used KNIGHTS PARTY COMMITTEE since 05/01/2012
Reason for change
June 12th, 2012 A kinder, gentler Ku Klux Klan? 'We do not hate anyone,' imperial wizard says
by Alicia W. Stewart, CNN
(CNN) –“All we wanna do is adopt a highway,” said April Chambers, secretary of the North Georgia chapter of the Ku Klux Klan. “We're not doing it for publicity. We're doing it to keep the mountains beautiful. People throwing trash out on the side of the road ... that ain't right."
The Knights Party in Zinc is now so small and insignificant it should be removed from Harrison area hate groups.
4. League of the South (Neo-Confederate)
The League of the South, a neo-Confederate group that supports secession, mustered a handful of flag wavers in Harrison in 2018 end and plan continuing displays in the former Sundown Town.
As yet, no clashes in Arkansas over flag displays as in South Carolina.
- Date Founded 1994, Location Killen, Ala.,Ideology Neo-Confederate
As yet, no clashes in Arkansas over flag displays as in South Carolina.
Should be removed from Harrison area hate groups - handful of flag wavers and no clashes over flag displays - nothing newsworthy as far as a hate group or anything else!
5. Ozark Craft LC (General Hate)
Scott Pendergraft married Thomas Robb’s Daughter Rachel
Date Founded 1982 Location Harrison, AR Ideology Christian Identity
Status is revoked and agent is Tom Robb’s son-in-law
Should be removed from Harrison area hate groups
Note: As many know, I have been doing discovery on the national checkered reputation of the Harrison Arkansas community. Something you should do for your community as well. Contact me if you need help, over the years I've become a research specialist expert. I have created a diary in my public Facebook Smart Governance Group for your review of my work. In addition I have summarized those findings in my LinkedIn profile under my articles. My interest is primarily as a capitalist, having founded and run a global technology company located in Harrison.
Contact information
Herb Lair
Senior Business Development Consultant
Cell (870) 365-5436
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