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Old 04-04-2013, 10:07 AM   #11
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And what, PRAY TELL, is the *sin* to assert that the idea came from Jews? After all, didn't Christianity claim it was BASED on Judaism and a FULFILLMENT and REPLACEMENT of Judaism?

Semiopen must think that other people's standard MO that Christianity borrowed from Greek myths or Mithraism is no big deal, but if a poster points to Jewish origins, perish the thought. After all *everyone* knows that Judaism borrowed from everyone else but could not have possibly been the source for other peoples.

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Originally Posted by semiopen View Post
Duvi's standard MO. Take something from the gospels and assert that the Jews thought of it first, even though the gospels are earlier than the Jewish references.

For no special reason, this guy would be remembered for 300 years. How many rich guys do you remember from 300 years ago?

NICODEMUS = NAKDIMON BEN GURION?

is from another forum.

It seems to have a little more detail.

Ironically, the guy starting it claims to be a Christian who wants to prove that Yoshke was cool because he had a disciple of Nicodemus' character.

Quote:
The claim of skeptics and of Judaism is that Christ was not the Messiah, that the idea of a dying and rising savior is foreign to Judaism, and that the gospels could be just a myth.

But here we have Nicodemus, a pharisee, one of the most famous and devout at the time, endorsing Christ and Christianity.

If we can match him to Nakdimon in ancient traditions, for whom the sun shone like Joshua and Moses, then this is further evidence of all of this.
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Old 04-04-2013, 10:36 AM   #12
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Originally Posted by Duvduv View Post
Jeffrey, I am saying that there could not possibly be any difference to some gentile reader in Italy or Asia Minor whether the rich Pharisee was a Nicodemus or Jack Spratt.
The issue isn't whether it made any difference of any kind to Gentile readers any where, but what John was up to in using the name.

Quote:
However, for purposes of adding an air of authenticity in relation to the Jews the NAME known from Jewish sources could have been inserted in relation to a previous anonymous individual. I mentioned this in a previous posting.
It could also have been used -- as Pilate's name was by John -- because there was a man named Nicodemus who was interested in Jesus teaching. Moreover, if Gentile readers didn't know who Nicodemus was, how could the insertion of N's name add authenticity to GJohn? And what is the nature of the authenticity it would it have added? And what about Jews who did know of Nicodemus? What air of authenticity would adding N's name have given to GJohn if they knew that N had not been someone who was interested in, let alone never met, Jesus? Wouldn't John's use of the name have laid him open to the charge of adding inauthenticity to his Gospel?

Sorry, but I don't think you know what you are talking about.

You certainly don't when you claim that your sources for who Nicodemus was tell us that Nicodemus was also known by the same name that according to the Talmud one of Jesus' disciples had and that Buni was Nicodemus's nickname.

And there's still that little matter of when you date the Babylonian Talmud.

Jeffrey
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Old 04-04-2013, 10:50 AM   #13
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Originally Posted by semiopen View Post
It is interesting that the same argument can support opposite conclusions.
I'm not sure how the argument that a learned Pharisee accepted Jesus gives weight to the idea that John's claims about Jesus being superior to Moses are not true -which is what is generally meant by "proving opposite conclusions".

Quote:
Perhaps this is proof that the argument is circular.
A circular argument is one that assumes what it needs to prove, not one that can also be used as evidence of the truth of entirely different claims. This one doesn't do what a circular argument does. (are you sure you know what a circular argument is?).

One may not accept this argument as weighty, or that it actually proves the truth of John's claims any more than one who points to how a Christian who converts to Islam is evidence for and proves the truth of Muslim claims about Muhammed, but it ain't circular.


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Old 04-04-2013, 11:08 AM   #14
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When you have a name like Nicodemus, meaning "Ruler of the People" - isn't that a big hint that the person is a symbolic representation of something rather than an actual person?

You might as well assume that the characters in Pilgrim's Progress are real people.
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Old 04-04-2013, 11:13 AM   #15
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Jeffrey, the Jewish rich man called Nakdimon of the first century gives an air of first century authentication to the Jesus story, as does the name of Gamliel in Acts (the gentile writer of Acts wants to impress the Jews that his Paul was familiar with the teachings of rabbis going back into time despite nothing in the writings attributed to Paul that suggest such familiarity), or the genealogies of Jesus.

The Talmud of over 2000 pages was not WRITTEN in the late 5th century. It was COMPILED. The Mishnah and Gemara, as well as other rabbinical writings of that period were compilations and arrangements of what had existed as personal notes in previous generations, now granted public access.

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Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Duvduv View Post
Jeffrey, I am saying that there could not possibly be any difference to some gentile reader in Italy or Asia Minor whether the rich Pharisee was a Nicodemus or Jack Spratt.
The issue isn't whether it made any difference of any kind to Gentile readers any where, but what John was up to in using the name.

Quote:
However, for purposes of adding an air of authenticity in relation to the Jews the NAME known from Jewish sources could have been inserted in relation to a previous anonymous individual. I mentioned this in a previous posting.
It could also have been used -- as Pilate's name was by John -- because there was a man named Nicodemus who was interested in Jesus teaching. Moreover, if Gentile readers didn't know who Nicodemus was, how could the insertion of N's name add authenticity to GJohn? And what is the nature of the authenticity it would it have added? And what about Jews who did know of Nicodemus? What air of authenticity would adding N's name have given to GJohn if they knew that N had not been someone who was interested in, let alone never met, Jesus? Wouldn't John's use of the name have laid him open to the charge of adding inauthenticity to his Gospel?

Sorry, but I don't think you know what you are talking about.

You certainly don't when you claim that your sources for who Nicodemus was tell us that Nicodemus was also known by the same name that according to the Talmud one of Jesus' disciples had and that Buni was Nicodemus's nickname.

And there's still that little matter of when you date the Babylonian Talmud.

Jeffrey
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Old 04-04-2013, 12:20 PM   #16
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Originally Posted by Toto View Post
When you have a name like Nicodemus, meaning "Ruler of the People" -
It actually means "conquerer of the people" (Nikos is from Nike meaning "victory" not ruler -- see the Anchor Bible Dictionary 4:1105). Its Semitic equivalent was “Naqdimon,” sometimes shortened to “Naqai.”

Quote:
isn't that a big hint that the person is a symbolic representation of something rather than an actual person?
It's possible evidence that it might be. But it's hardly conclusive evidence that it was.

It was not an unknown name. You'll find it, for instance, in Josephus and Plutarch and Isaeus and Aeschines and Galen. e.g.,

Flavius Josephus Hist., Antiquitates Judaicae
Book 14, chapter 37, line 2

Μετ' οὐ πολὺ δὲ ἧκον πάλιν πρέσβεις πρὸς αὐτὸν Ἀντί-
πατρος μὲν ὑπὲρ Ὑρκανοῦ, Νικόδημος δὲ ὑπὲρ Ἀριστοβούλου, ὃς
δὴ καὶ κατηγόρει τῶν λαβόντων χρήματα Γαβινίου μὲν πρότερον
Σκαύρου δὲ ὕστερον, τοῦ μὲν τριακόσια τοῦ δὲ τετρακόσια τάλαντα,
πρὸς τοῖς ἄλλοις καὶ τούτους ἐχθροὺς αὐτῷ κατασκευάζων.

Plutarchus Biogr., Phil., Themistocles
Chapter 32, section 3, line 1

θυγατέρας
δὲ πλείους ἔσχεν, ὧν Μνησιπτολέμαν μὲν ἐκ τῆς ἐπι-
γαμηθείσης γενομένην Ἀρχέπτολις ὁ ἀδελφὸς οὐκ ὢν
ὁμομήτριος ἔγημεν, Ἰταλίαν δὲ Πανθοίδης ὁ Χῖος, Σύ-
βαριν δὲ Νικόδημος ὁ Ἀθηναῖος.


Isaeus Orat., De Pyrrho
Section 7, line 4

Ὡς μὲν ἔδοξε παραχρῆμα εὐθὺς τότε <πᾶσι> τὰ ψευδῆ
μαρτυρῆσαι Νικόδημος, ἐπιδέδεικται [τότε πᾶσι]· προς-
ήκει δὲ καὶ παρ' ὑμῖν τοῖς περὶ αὐτοῦ τούτου τὴν δίκην
μέλλουσι ψηφιεῖσθαι ἐξελεγχθῆναι τὴν τούτου μαρτυρίαν.



Quote:
You might as well assume that the characters in Pilgrim's Progress are real people.
Leaving aside the fact that Pilgrims progress is self consciously and professedly allegorical, and that the character's names there -- e.g. Obstinate, Pliable, Help, Worldly Wiseman, Formalist, Hypocrisy - are patently ciphers, I note that my name means "God's Peace/God's Friend, but that we have n reason to believe that when anyone here speaks of me by my name, they are actually speaking of a fictional/symbolic charater.

Jeffrey
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Old 04-05-2013, 06:55 AM   #17
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There still has to be doubt about Nakdimon's existence.

Seems like an interesting issue because Yonathon ben Zakkai is said to have officiated at his daughter's wedding. I spent some time discussing Yonathon's claim to actual existence in Spin's Pharisee thread. I think the odds of an actual character behind the Nakdimon name are about 50-50 without going into deep research mode.

The question, I thought, is whether Nicodemus and Nakdimon are the same person, which is a well known issue.

Harvey Falk

Goes into the Hillel Shammai disputes.

Needless to say, I don't know shit about this. The rap I get from Chabad is that Hillel and Shammai were two good guys who had some different opinions, like Hillel would light the Hanukkah candles starting with one on the first night and add one each night, and Shammai would start with eight and take one away on each night.

However, it seems, as Spin suggests in the Pharisee thread, this was more of a war between Pharisees.

Anyway, Harvey is discussing his book

Jesus the Pharisee: A New Look at the Jewishness of Jesus (or via: amazon.co.uk)

where, as he states on the Jstor thing he wanted to

Quote:
promote the peace and fellowship between Christians and Jews
I guess because Yoshke was a Hillel guy just like the later Pharisees, and not an asshole like the Shammai guys like the mean Pharisees who were supposedly prevalent during Yoshke's ministry - despite whatever the bizzare Chabad rap means.

This is a middle of the road opinion - both Jews and Christians should be happy.

Now I might be wrong, but Duvi's opinion is probably that these two guys are the same, but that somehow proves the superiority of Judaism over Christianity. His opinion is the opposite of the guy in the other thread I quoted who says Christianity wins.

Personally, I take the view that both Jews and Christians should be pissed off that they care about this shit. However, it raises some interesting academic issues.
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Old 04-05-2013, 08:27 AM   #18
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Originally Posted by semiopen View Post
There still has to be doubt about Nakdimon's existence.
Why?

Quote:
Seems like an interesting issue because Yonathon ben Zakkai is said to have officiated at his daughter's wedding. I spent some time discussing Yonathon's claim to actual existence in Spin's Pharisee thread. I think the odds of an actual character behind the Nakdimon name are about 50-50 without going into deep research mode.
Why should we trust your estimation?

Quote:
The question, I thought, is whether Nicodemus and Nakdimon are the same person, which is a well known issue.
Yes, see the BDAG entry:

Quote:
Νικόδημος, ου, ὁ a name common among Jews and Gentiles (exx. in Wettstein; Diod. S. 16, 82; 4; Jos., Ant. 14, 37; Dit., Syll.2 and Preisigke, Sb in the indices; PHib. 110, 60; 75; 105; PFlor. 6, 20 Νικόδημος βουλευτής) Nicodemus (in rabb. ךַקְדֵּימוֹן), a member of the Sanhedrin who was favorable to Jesus and his cause, mentioned only in the Fourth Gospel. Little is known about him, and the connection w. the Talmudic Nicodemus, whose real name is said to have been Buni ben Gorion, and who was held to be a disciple of Jesus (Billerb. II 413f), is questionable. J 3:1, 4, 9; 7:50; 19:39.—BZimolong, D. Nikod. perikope (J 2:23-3:22) nach d. syrosinait. Text, Diss. Bresl. ’19; SMendner, JBL 77, ’58, 293-323. M-M.*

As well as article by Jon Paulien in the ABD which notes:

Quote:
There is no serious reason to doubt that Nicodemus was a historical individual. It is questionable, however, whether the gospel material leads to the conclusion that he became a disciple of Jesus. Brown (John AB, 130) sees Nicodemus as the counterpart to Judas: he moves from darkness to light (3:2), just as Judas moved from light to darkness (13:30). Along with him Beasley-Murray (John WBC, 47), Cotterell (1985: 238), King (1986: 45), Morris (John NICNT, 210) and Schnackenburg (1980–82, 1: 364–65) understand the actions of 19:38–42 to be those of a secret but committed disciple of Jesus. However, secret discipleship is not a complementary designation in the Fourth Gospel (12:42, 43). And it is possible to understand the extravagance of Jesus’ burial not as an act of love and respect as do Bultmann (1971: 680n4) and Schnackenburg (1980–82, 3: 295), or as a pointer to His royalty as do Morris (825) and Brown (60), but as a failure to understand the cross combined with a lack of faith in the resurrection (see De Jonge 1971: 342 and Sylva 1988: 148). Thus, Michel (1981: 231), Pamment (1985: 71, 73), and Sylva (1988: 149) argue that Nicodemus remained on the fence throughout the gospel, never making a positive decision for Jesus.
Considerable study has investigated whether Nicodemus might be equated with one or more individuals in the Talmud or in the writings of Josephus. Helpful summaries of the evidence can be found in Klausner Jesus of Nazareth (New York: (1929) : 29–30), Robinson The Priority of John. (1985: 284–87) and Str-B 2:413–19 (Strack and P. Billerbeck. 1922–61. Kommentar zum NT aus Talmud und Midrasch. 6 vols. Munich) but the evidence is insufficient at this point to draw any firm conclusions. The total absence of Nicodemus in the Talmud would not be surprising if he indeed became a Christian.
See, too,
King, J. S. 1986. Nicodemus and the Pharisees. ExpTim 98: 45.
Mendner, S. 1958. Nikodemus. JBL 77: 293–323.
Michel, M. 1981. Nicodème ou le non-lieu de la verité. RevScRel 55: 227–36

Jeffrey
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Old 04-05-2013, 09:23 AM   #19
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Leaving aside Semiopen's use of vulgarities I would be willing to discuss all these issues, though as I said before, I don't think this Forum is the place for it, even if Semiopen wants to drag me into it here.

Suffice it to say for now that Hillel and Shammai served together as the leaders of the Sanhedrin during a 40+ year period. And Jewish sources say that Hillel died first, and that between them there were only 3 subjects of law in disagreement. Shammai died about 20 years later (having continued to serve together with Hillel's son R. Gamliel the Elder), and the disagreements among certain disciples (i.e. the major 20 students who were actually followers of both, such as R. Yonatan ben Uziel and R. Yohanan ben Zakkai, and their own students) probably started a generation after that and lasted for about 40 years until about 15 years after the destruction of the Temple, the Sanhedrin headed by R. Yohanan ben Zakkai established all halacha in dispute between the two camps according to the disciples of Hillel.

Quote:
Originally Posted by semiopen View Post
There still has to be doubt about Nakdimon's existence.

Seems like an interesting issue because Yonathon ben Zakkai is said to have officiated at his daughter's wedding. I spent some time discussing Yonathon's claim to actual existence in Spin's Pharisee thread. I think the odds of an actual character behind the Nakdimon name are about 50-50 without going into deep research mode.

The question, I thought, is whether Nicodemus and Nakdimon are the same person, which is a well known issue.

Harvey Falk

Goes into the Hillel Shammai disputes.

Needless to say, I don't know shit about this. The rap I get from Chabad is that Hillel and Shammai were two good guys who had some different opinions, like Hillel would light the Hanukkah candles starting with one on the first night and add one each night, and Shammai would start with eight and take one away on each night.

However, it seems, as Spin suggests in the Pharisee thread, this was more of a war between Pharisees.

Anyway, Harvey is discussing his book

Jesus the Pharisee: A New Look at the Jewishness of Jesus (or via: amazon.co.uk)

where, as he states on the Jstor thing he wanted to

Quote:
promote the peace and fellowship between Christians and Jews
I guess because Yoshke was a Hillel guy just like the later Pharisees, and not an asshole like the Shammai guys like the mean Pharisees who were supposedly prevalent during Yoshke's ministry - despite whatever the bizzare Chabad rap means.

This is a middle of the road opinion - both Jews and Christians should be happy.

Now I might be wrong, but Duvi's opinion is probably that these two guys are the same, but that somehow proves the superiority of Judaism over Christianity. His opinion is the opposite of the guy in the other thread I quoted who says Christianity wins.

Personally, I take the view that both Jews and Christians should be pissed off that they care about this shit. However, it raises some interesting academic issues.
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Old 04-05-2013, 11:50 AM   #20
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Duvduv View Post
Leaving aside Semiopen's use of vulgarities I would be willing to discuss all these issues, though as I said before, I don't think this Forum is the place for it, even if Semiopen wants to drag me into it here.

Suffice it to say for now that Hillel and Shammai served together as the leaders of the Sanhedrin during a 40+ year period. And Jewish sources say that Hillel died first, and that between them there were only 3 subjects of law in disagreement. Shammai died about 20 years later (having continued to serve together with Hillel's son R. Gamliel the Elder), and the disagreements among certain disciples (i.e. the major 20 students who were actually followers of both, such as R. Yonatan ben Uziel and R. Yohanan ben Zakkai, and their own students) probably started a generation after that and lasted for about 40 years until about 15 years after the destruction of the Temple, the Sanhedrin headed by R. Yohanan ben Zakkai established all halacha in dispute between the two camps according to the disciples of Hillel.

Quote:
Originally Posted by semiopen View Post
There still has to be doubt about Nakdimon's existence.

Seems like an interesting issue because Yonathon ben Zakkai is said to have officiated at his daughter's wedding. I spent some time discussing Yonathon's claim to actual existence in Spin's Pharisee thread. I think the odds of an actual character behind the Nakdimon name are about 50-50 without going into deep research mode.

The question, I thought, is whether Nicodemus and Nakdimon are the same person, which is a well known issue.

Harvey Falk

Goes into the Hillel Shammai disputes.

Needless to say, I don't know shit about this. The rap I get from Chabad is that Hillel and Shammai were two good guys who had some different opinions, like Hillel would light the Hanukkah candles starting with one on the first night and add one each night, and Shammai would start with eight and take one away on each night.

However, it seems, as Spin suggests in the Pharisee thread, this was more of a war between Pharisees.

Anyway, Harvey is discussing his book

Jesus the Pharisee: A New Look at the Jewishness of Jesus (or via: amazon.co.uk)

where, as he states on the Jstor thing he wanted to



I guess because Yoshke was a Hillel guy just like the later Pharisees, and not an asshole like the Shammai guys like the mean Pharisees who were supposedly prevalent during Yoshke's ministry - despite whatever the bizzare Chabad rap means.

This is a middle of the road opinion - both Jews and Christians should be happy.

Now I might be wrong, but Duvi's opinion is probably that these two guys are the same, but that somehow proves the superiority of Judaism over Christianity. His opinion is the opposite of the guy in the other thread I quoted who says Christianity wins.

Personally, I take the view that both Jews and Christians should be pissed off that they care about this shit. However, it raises some interesting academic issues.
I don't know why your problem is with me. I simply quoted Rabbi Falks who has dealt with this issue.

Ironically, I accepted the Chabad explanation and was totally unaware of a wider dispute until Spin mentioned it in passing.

I can see how the constant abuse you have to put with can get annoying, but how do you think I feel when my esteemed religious leaders finally say something that sounds close to plausible, only to discover later that it has just as much bullshit in it as everything else they say.

I also can't imagine why this is not the place to discuss it. Isn't my post totally on topic? In fact if there was a contest to pick a post that was totally on topic in this forum, my post would probably be a solid candidate for at least an honorable mention.

Since I have just been introduced to this concept, why do you think I want to debate it? I haven't even constructed an opinion.

However, if there is merit in the Zealots favoring Shammai and the normal people favoring Hillel, that is a very attractive concept. This directly relates to your buddy Nakdimon being one of the three big shots in Jerusalem before the destruction of the temple where the Talmud has him opposing the Zealots. True, untangling the bullshit is a formidable task.

Your view of Hillel/Shammai seems dubious on general principles. Your position (and the Rabbis I suppose) is similar to

Chief Clancy Wiggum - Nothing to see here

God forbid these clowns would have a substantial disagreement, what would the old ladies say?

Paul and the Torah

Quote:
Within Pharisaic Judaism, the group that stood closest to this strict application of the law to Gentiles was probably the House of Shammai. I am thinking here not of the personal animosity to Gentiles attributed to Shammai and Eliezer b. Hyrkanos in some stories and sayings but of an attitude which shows that they were less open than some to compromise on matters of the law in relationship to proselytes, their pessimism concerning Gentiles, and in general their greater zeal for the law. Thus as a counterpoint to the leniency of Ananias in the story of the conversion of King Izates, Eleazar later insisted on circumcision and the whole law. Especially significant were the nationalistic Eighteen Measures against Gentiles forced through by the House of Shammai at the beginning of the war of C. E. 66-70. 54 While the word "Zealot" did not acquire the technical meaning of a specific party before the war, the concept of being zealous for the law certainly fits the Shammaites better than any other Pharisees. There are many indications that Paul was a Shammaite. 55
Also Shammai

Quote:
Shammai's school of thought became known as the House of Shammai (Hebrew: Beth Shammai‎), as Hillel's was known as the House of Hillel (Beit Hillel). After Menahem the Essene had resigned the office of Av Beit Din (or vice-president) of the Sanhedrin, Shammai was elected to it, Hillel being at the time president. After Hillel died, circa 20 CE, Shammai took his place as president but no vice-president from the minority was elected so that the school of Shammai attained complete ascendancy, during which Shammai passed "18 ordinances" in conformity with his ideas. The Talmud states that when he passed one of the ordinances, contrary to the opinion of Hillel, the day "was as grievous to Israel as the day when the [golden] calf was made" (Shabbat, 17a). The exact content of the ordinances is not known, but they seem to have been designed to strengthen Jewish identity by insisting on stringent separation between Jews and gentiles, an approach that was regarded as divisive and misanthropic by Shammai's opponents.

Hillel's grandson Gamaliel succeeded to the position of president after Shammai in the year 30, but the Sanhedrin would remain dominated by the house of Shammai until around 70 (see Council of Jamnia). A "voice from heaven" is said to have nullified the legality of the rulings of the house of Shammai (Yerushalmi Berakhot, 1:4), which is why Rabbinical Judaism follows Hillel.
Who knows how true all this is, but you're the one who opened the door.

BTW your offer to debate reminds me of Shmuley Boteach's debates with Christopher Hitchens.

God Debate: Christopher Hitchens vs Shmuley Boteach

Hitchens is virtually dead in their final one and still probably wins.
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