Did Neomi Rao support dwarf-tossing?












8















A recent article about Neomi Rao's nomination to replace Brett Kavanaugh on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals claims that Rao has a record of defending dwarf-tossing.




Conservatives are discouraging talk of Rao as a future justice, recognizing that it will only draw more scrutiny of her record, which has recently been criticized over controversial positions like her defense of dwarf-tossing and past skepticism of date rape claims.




Does Neomi Rao have a record of defending dwarf-tossing? Also, how did that end up in court?










share|improve this question

























  • FYI, the Washington Post article linked in the article you linked to provides the info you want. washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/magazine/…

    – UnhandledExcepSean
    3 hours ago













  • @UnhandledExcepSean, I haven't read WP much since they enacted their paywall.

    – elliot svensson
    3 hours ago






  • 2





    No tag wiki for dwarf tossing? Are you expecting pixies to create the wiki for you?

    – Andrew Grimm
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    I'm not impressed that much research went into this question. They provided a link, and many newspapers have this story.

    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago






  • 2





    @elliotsvensson: You didn't even follow the link provided, and quote from that. We shouldn't allow ourselves to turn into a "Could someone bypass this paywall for me, please?" site. (I don't see this as extraordinary, but that's opinion.)

    – Oddthinking
    38 mins ago
















8















A recent article about Neomi Rao's nomination to replace Brett Kavanaugh on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals claims that Rao has a record of defending dwarf-tossing.




Conservatives are discouraging talk of Rao as a future justice, recognizing that it will only draw more scrutiny of her record, which has recently been criticized over controversial positions like her defense of dwarf-tossing and past skepticism of date rape claims.




Does Neomi Rao have a record of defending dwarf-tossing? Also, how did that end up in court?










share|improve this question

























  • FYI, the Washington Post article linked in the article you linked to provides the info you want. washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/magazine/…

    – UnhandledExcepSean
    3 hours ago













  • @UnhandledExcepSean, I haven't read WP much since they enacted their paywall.

    – elliot svensson
    3 hours ago






  • 2





    No tag wiki for dwarf tossing? Are you expecting pixies to create the wiki for you?

    – Andrew Grimm
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    I'm not impressed that much research went into this question. They provided a link, and many newspapers have this story.

    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago






  • 2





    @elliotsvensson: You didn't even follow the link provided, and quote from that. We shouldn't allow ourselves to turn into a "Could someone bypass this paywall for me, please?" site. (I don't see this as extraordinary, but that's opinion.)

    – Oddthinking
    38 mins ago














8












8








8


1






A recent article about Neomi Rao's nomination to replace Brett Kavanaugh on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals claims that Rao has a record of defending dwarf-tossing.




Conservatives are discouraging talk of Rao as a future justice, recognizing that it will only draw more scrutiny of her record, which has recently been criticized over controversial positions like her defense of dwarf-tossing and past skepticism of date rape claims.




Does Neomi Rao have a record of defending dwarf-tossing? Also, how did that end up in court?










share|improve this question
















A recent article about Neomi Rao's nomination to replace Brett Kavanaugh on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals claims that Rao has a record of defending dwarf-tossing.




Conservatives are discouraging talk of Rao as a future justice, recognizing that it will only draw more scrutiny of her record, which has recently been criticized over controversial positions like her defense of dwarf-tossing and past skepticism of date rape claims.




Does Neomi Rao have a record of defending dwarf-tossing? Also, how did that end up in court?







united-states dwarf-tossing






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 40 mins ago









Oddthinking

101k31421527




101k31421527










asked 4 hours ago









elliot svenssonelliot svensson

2,061531




2,061531













  • FYI, the Washington Post article linked in the article you linked to provides the info you want. washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/magazine/…

    – UnhandledExcepSean
    3 hours ago













  • @UnhandledExcepSean, I haven't read WP much since they enacted their paywall.

    – elliot svensson
    3 hours ago






  • 2





    No tag wiki for dwarf tossing? Are you expecting pixies to create the wiki for you?

    – Andrew Grimm
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    I'm not impressed that much research went into this question. They provided a link, and many newspapers have this story.

    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago






  • 2





    @elliotsvensson: You didn't even follow the link provided, and quote from that. We shouldn't allow ourselves to turn into a "Could someone bypass this paywall for me, please?" site. (I don't see this as extraordinary, but that's opinion.)

    – Oddthinking
    38 mins ago



















  • FYI, the Washington Post article linked in the article you linked to provides the info you want. washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/magazine/…

    – UnhandledExcepSean
    3 hours ago













  • @UnhandledExcepSean, I haven't read WP much since they enacted their paywall.

    – elliot svensson
    3 hours ago






  • 2





    No tag wiki for dwarf tossing? Are you expecting pixies to create the wiki for you?

    – Andrew Grimm
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    I'm not impressed that much research went into this question. They provided a link, and many newspapers have this story.

    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago






  • 2





    @elliotsvensson: You didn't even follow the link provided, and quote from that. We shouldn't allow ourselves to turn into a "Could someone bypass this paywall for me, please?" site. (I don't see this as extraordinary, but that's opinion.)

    – Oddthinking
    38 mins ago

















FYI, the Washington Post article linked in the article you linked to provides the info you want. washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/magazine/…

– UnhandledExcepSean
3 hours ago







FYI, the Washington Post article linked in the article you linked to provides the info you want. washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/magazine/…

– UnhandledExcepSean
3 hours ago















@UnhandledExcepSean, I haven't read WP much since they enacted their paywall.

– elliot svensson
3 hours ago





@UnhandledExcepSean, I haven't read WP much since they enacted their paywall.

– elliot svensson
3 hours ago




2




2





No tag wiki for dwarf tossing? Are you expecting pixies to create the wiki for you?

– Andrew Grimm
1 hour ago





No tag wiki for dwarf tossing? Are you expecting pixies to create the wiki for you?

– Andrew Grimm
1 hour ago




1




1





I'm not impressed that much research went into this question. They provided a link, and many newspapers have this story.

– Oddthinking
1 hour ago





I'm not impressed that much research went into this question. They provided a link, and many newspapers have this story.

– Oddthinking
1 hour ago




2




2





@elliotsvensson: You didn't even follow the link provided, and quote from that. We shouldn't allow ourselves to turn into a "Could someone bypass this paywall for me, please?" site. (I don't see this as extraordinary, but that's opinion.)

– Oddthinking
38 mins ago





@elliotsvensson: You didn't even follow the link provided, and quote from that. We shouldn't allow ourselves to turn into a "Could someone bypass this paywall for me, please?" site. (I don't see this as extraordinary, but that's opinion.)

– Oddthinking
38 mins ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















21














Rao wrote the blog article Substantive Dignity-Dwarf-throwing, Burqa Bans, and Welfare Rights as well as more-formal articles cited therein:




In a much-discussed French case, Mr. Wackenheim, a dwarf, made his living by allowing himself to be thrown for sport. The mayors of several cities banned dwarf tossing events. Mr. Wackenheim challenged the orders on the grounds that they interfered with his economic liberty and right to earn a living. The case went to the Conseil d’Etat (the supreme administrative court), which upheld the bans on the grounds that dwarf throwing affronted human dignity, which was part of the “public order” controlled by the municipal police. The Wackenheim case demonstrates how a substantive understanding of dignity can be used to coerce individuals by forcing upon them a particular understanding of dignity irrespective of their individual choices.




...




The issue is not whether laws prohibiting dwarf throwing, burqa wearing, prostitution, or pornography may be desirable social policy. Rather these examples demonstrate that the conception of dignity used to defend such policies is not that of human agency and freedom of choice, but rather represents a particular moral view of what dignity requires. These laws do not purport to maximize individual freedom, but instead regulate how individuals must behave in order to maintain dignity (and in the case of criminal prohibitions, stay out of jail).




For the related academic article see Three Concepts of Dignity in Constitutional Law Notre Dame Law Review volume 86, pages 183-271, particularly the "Dwarf Throwing" section on pages 226-227.



So in conclusion, she supports allowing dwarfs who what to be thrown, to be thrown, as opposed to outlawing the practice.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    TL;DR no, he doesn't support it. You should add it to your answer.

    – JonathanReez
    50 mins ago








  • 5





    I think it is worth clarifying the difference between "supporting dwarf-tossing" (as the title of the question claims) and "rejecting laws which ban activities based only on moral views of dignity, such as anti-dwarf-tossing laws". (e.g. I do not support people using the word "learnings" where they mean the word "lessons" - it is undignified - but I reject any proposed laws against it.)

    – Oddthinking
    33 mins ago











  • @JonathanReez she supports allowing dwarfs who want to be thrown to be thrown.

    – DavePhD
    13 mins ago











  • @JonathanReez Given the reactions to and headlines about this nomination, it seems that Rao’s position is open to interpretation, probably depending on one’s political affiliation or inclination (as sad a state of affairs as that is). Providing the context and Rao’s actual words on the topic and letting the reader decide what her position is makes a fine answer, IMO. (+1)

    – HopelessN00b
    9 mins ago













  • She supports freedom, even if that includes allowing dwarf throwing. Whether or not she personally supports the practice is unknown.

    – JonathanReez
    8 mins ago



















3














No, he doesn't. He is against laws regulating dwarf-tossing, but not because he supports dwarf-tossing, but because a general rejection of laws based on subjective moral views. That's very different.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Pedro is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • she not he.

    – DavePhD
    12 mins ago



















2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









21














Rao wrote the blog article Substantive Dignity-Dwarf-throwing, Burqa Bans, and Welfare Rights as well as more-formal articles cited therein:




In a much-discussed French case, Mr. Wackenheim, a dwarf, made his living by allowing himself to be thrown for sport. The mayors of several cities banned dwarf tossing events. Mr. Wackenheim challenged the orders on the grounds that they interfered with his economic liberty and right to earn a living. The case went to the Conseil d’Etat (the supreme administrative court), which upheld the bans on the grounds that dwarf throwing affronted human dignity, which was part of the “public order” controlled by the municipal police. The Wackenheim case demonstrates how a substantive understanding of dignity can be used to coerce individuals by forcing upon them a particular understanding of dignity irrespective of their individual choices.




...




The issue is not whether laws prohibiting dwarf throwing, burqa wearing, prostitution, or pornography may be desirable social policy. Rather these examples demonstrate that the conception of dignity used to defend such policies is not that of human agency and freedom of choice, but rather represents a particular moral view of what dignity requires. These laws do not purport to maximize individual freedom, but instead regulate how individuals must behave in order to maintain dignity (and in the case of criminal prohibitions, stay out of jail).




For the related academic article see Three Concepts of Dignity in Constitutional Law Notre Dame Law Review volume 86, pages 183-271, particularly the "Dwarf Throwing" section on pages 226-227.



So in conclusion, she supports allowing dwarfs who what to be thrown, to be thrown, as opposed to outlawing the practice.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    TL;DR no, he doesn't support it. You should add it to your answer.

    – JonathanReez
    50 mins ago








  • 5





    I think it is worth clarifying the difference between "supporting dwarf-tossing" (as the title of the question claims) and "rejecting laws which ban activities based only on moral views of dignity, such as anti-dwarf-tossing laws". (e.g. I do not support people using the word "learnings" where they mean the word "lessons" - it is undignified - but I reject any proposed laws against it.)

    – Oddthinking
    33 mins ago











  • @JonathanReez she supports allowing dwarfs who want to be thrown to be thrown.

    – DavePhD
    13 mins ago











  • @JonathanReez Given the reactions to and headlines about this nomination, it seems that Rao’s position is open to interpretation, probably depending on one’s political affiliation or inclination (as sad a state of affairs as that is). Providing the context and Rao’s actual words on the topic and letting the reader decide what her position is makes a fine answer, IMO. (+1)

    – HopelessN00b
    9 mins ago













  • She supports freedom, even if that includes allowing dwarf throwing. Whether or not she personally supports the practice is unknown.

    – JonathanReez
    8 mins ago
















21














Rao wrote the blog article Substantive Dignity-Dwarf-throwing, Burqa Bans, and Welfare Rights as well as more-formal articles cited therein:




In a much-discussed French case, Mr. Wackenheim, a dwarf, made his living by allowing himself to be thrown for sport. The mayors of several cities banned dwarf tossing events. Mr. Wackenheim challenged the orders on the grounds that they interfered with his economic liberty and right to earn a living. The case went to the Conseil d’Etat (the supreme administrative court), which upheld the bans on the grounds that dwarf throwing affronted human dignity, which was part of the “public order” controlled by the municipal police. The Wackenheim case demonstrates how a substantive understanding of dignity can be used to coerce individuals by forcing upon them a particular understanding of dignity irrespective of their individual choices.




...




The issue is not whether laws prohibiting dwarf throwing, burqa wearing, prostitution, or pornography may be desirable social policy. Rather these examples demonstrate that the conception of dignity used to defend such policies is not that of human agency and freedom of choice, but rather represents a particular moral view of what dignity requires. These laws do not purport to maximize individual freedom, but instead regulate how individuals must behave in order to maintain dignity (and in the case of criminal prohibitions, stay out of jail).




For the related academic article see Three Concepts of Dignity in Constitutional Law Notre Dame Law Review volume 86, pages 183-271, particularly the "Dwarf Throwing" section on pages 226-227.



So in conclusion, she supports allowing dwarfs who what to be thrown, to be thrown, as opposed to outlawing the practice.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    TL;DR no, he doesn't support it. You should add it to your answer.

    – JonathanReez
    50 mins ago








  • 5





    I think it is worth clarifying the difference between "supporting dwarf-tossing" (as the title of the question claims) and "rejecting laws which ban activities based only on moral views of dignity, such as anti-dwarf-tossing laws". (e.g. I do not support people using the word "learnings" where they mean the word "lessons" - it is undignified - but I reject any proposed laws against it.)

    – Oddthinking
    33 mins ago











  • @JonathanReez she supports allowing dwarfs who want to be thrown to be thrown.

    – DavePhD
    13 mins ago











  • @JonathanReez Given the reactions to and headlines about this nomination, it seems that Rao’s position is open to interpretation, probably depending on one’s political affiliation or inclination (as sad a state of affairs as that is). Providing the context and Rao’s actual words on the topic and letting the reader decide what her position is makes a fine answer, IMO. (+1)

    – HopelessN00b
    9 mins ago













  • She supports freedom, even if that includes allowing dwarf throwing. Whether or not she personally supports the practice is unknown.

    – JonathanReez
    8 mins ago














21












21








21







Rao wrote the blog article Substantive Dignity-Dwarf-throwing, Burqa Bans, and Welfare Rights as well as more-formal articles cited therein:




In a much-discussed French case, Mr. Wackenheim, a dwarf, made his living by allowing himself to be thrown for sport. The mayors of several cities banned dwarf tossing events. Mr. Wackenheim challenged the orders on the grounds that they interfered with his economic liberty and right to earn a living. The case went to the Conseil d’Etat (the supreme administrative court), which upheld the bans on the grounds that dwarf throwing affronted human dignity, which was part of the “public order” controlled by the municipal police. The Wackenheim case demonstrates how a substantive understanding of dignity can be used to coerce individuals by forcing upon them a particular understanding of dignity irrespective of their individual choices.




...




The issue is not whether laws prohibiting dwarf throwing, burqa wearing, prostitution, or pornography may be desirable social policy. Rather these examples demonstrate that the conception of dignity used to defend such policies is not that of human agency and freedom of choice, but rather represents a particular moral view of what dignity requires. These laws do not purport to maximize individual freedom, but instead regulate how individuals must behave in order to maintain dignity (and in the case of criminal prohibitions, stay out of jail).




For the related academic article see Three Concepts of Dignity in Constitutional Law Notre Dame Law Review volume 86, pages 183-271, particularly the "Dwarf Throwing" section on pages 226-227.



So in conclusion, she supports allowing dwarfs who what to be thrown, to be thrown, as opposed to outlawing the practice.






share|improve this answer















Rao wrote the blog article Substantive Dignity-Dwarf-throwing, Burqa Bans, and Welfare Rights as well as more-formal articles cited therein:




In a much-discussed French case, Mr. Wackenheim, a dwarf, made his living by allowing himself to be thrown for sport. The mayors of several cities banned dwarf tossing events. Mr. Wackenheim challenged the orders on the grounds that they interfered with his economic liberty and right to earn a living. The case went to the Conseil d’Etat (the supreme administrative court), which upheld the bans on the grounds that dwarf throwing affronted human dignity, which was part of the “public order” controlled by the municipal police. The Wackenheim case demonstrates how a substantive understanding of dignity can be used to coerce individuals by forcing upon them a particular understanding of dignity irrespective of their individual choices.




...




The issue is not whether laws prohibiting dwarf throwing, burqa wearing, prostitution, or pornography may be desirable social policy. Rather these examples demonstrate that the conception of dignity used to defend such policies is not that of human agency and freedom of choice, but rather represents a particular moral view of what dignity requires. These laws do not purport to maximize individual freedom, but instead regulate how individuals must behave in order to maintain dignity (and in the case of criminal prohibitions, stay out of jail).




For the related academic article see Three Concepts of Dignity in Constitutional Law Notre Dame Law Review volume 86, pages 183-271, particularly the "Dwarf Throwing" section on pages 226-227.



So in conclusion, she supports allowing dwarfs who what to be thrown, to be thrown, as opposed to outlawing the practice.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 9 mins ago

























answered 3 hours ago









DavePhDDavePhD

77.4k19327356




77.4k19327356








  • 1





    TL;DR no, he doesn't support it. You should add it to your answer.

    – JonathanReez
    50 mins ago








  • 5





    I think it is worth clarifying the difference between "supporting dwarf-tossing" (as the title of the question claims) and "rejecting laws which ban activities based only on moral views of dignity, such as anti-dwarf-tossing laws". (e.g. I do not support people using the word "learnings" where they mean the word "lessons" - it is undignified - but I reject any proposed laws against it.)

    – Oddthinking
    33 mins ago











  • @JonathanReez she supports allowing dwarfs who want to be thrown to be thrown.

    – DavePhD
    13 mins ago











  • @JonathanReez Given the reactions to and headlines about this nomination, it seems that Rao’s position is open to interpretation, probably depending on one’s political affiliation or inclination (as sad a state of affairs as that is). Providing the context and Rao’s actual words on the topic and letting the reader decide what her position is makes a fine answer, IMO. (+1)

    – HopelessN00b
    9 mins ago













  • She supports freedom, even if that includes allowing dwarf throwing. Whether or not she personally supports the practice is unknown.

    – JonathanReez
    8 mins ago














  • 1





    TL;DR no, he doesn't support it. You should add it to your answer.

    – JonathanReez
    50 mins ago








  • 5





    I think it is worth clarifying the difference between "supporting dwarf-tossing" (as the title of the question claims) and "rejecting laws which ban activities based only on moral views of dignity, such as anti-dwarf-tossing laws". (e.g. I do not support people using the word "learnings" where they mean the word "lessons" - it is undignified - but I reject any proposed laws against it.)

    – Oddthinking
    33 mins ago











  • @JonathanReez she supports allowing dwarfs who want to be thrown to be thrown.

    – DavePhD
    13 mins ago











  • @JonathanReez Given the reactions to and headlines about this nomination, it seems that Rao’s position is open to interpretation, probably depending on one’s political affiliation or inclination (as sad a state of affairs as that is). Providing the context and Rao’s actual words on the topic and letting the reader decide what her position is makes a fine answer, IMO. (+1)

    – HopelessN00b
    9 mins ago













  • She supports freedom, even if that includes allowing dwarf throwing. Whether or not she personally supports the practice is unknown.

    – JonathanReez
    8 mins ago








1




1





TL;DR no, he doesn't support it. You should add it to your answer.

– JonathanReez
50 mins ago







TL;DR no, he doesn't support it. You should add it to your answer.

– JonathanReez
50 mins ago






5




5





I think it is worth clarifying the difference between "supporting dwarf-tossing" (as the title of the question claims) and "rejecting laws which ban activities based only on moral views of dignity, such as anti-dwarf-tossing laws". (e.g. I do not support people using the word "learnings" where they mean the word "lessons" - it is undignified - but I reject any proposed laws against it.)

– Oddthinking
33 mins ago





I think it is worth clarifying the difference between "supporting dwarf-tossing" (as the title of the question claims) and "rejecting laws which ban activities based only on moral views of dignity, such as anti-dwarf-tossing laws". (e.g. I do not support people using the word "learnings" where they mean the word "lessons" - it is undignified - but I reject any proposed laws against it.)

– Oddthinking
33 mins ago













@JonathanReez she supports allowing dwarfs who want to be thrown to be thrown.

– DavePhD
13 mins ago





@JonathanReez she supports allowing dwarfs who want to be thrown to be thrown.

– DavePhD
13 mins ago













@JonathanReez Given the reactions to and headlines about this nomination, it seems that Rao’s position is open to interpretation, probably depending on one’s political affiliation or inclination (as sad a state of affairs as that is). Providing the context and Rao’s actual words on the topic and letting the reader decide what her position is makes a fine answer, IMO. (+1)

– HopelessN00b
9 mins ago







@JonathanReez Given the reactions to and headlines about this nomination, it seems that Rao’s position is open to interpretation, probably depending on one’s political affiliation or inclination (as sad a state of affairs as that is). Providing the context and Rao’s actual words on the topic and letting the reader decide what her position is makes a fine answer, IMO. (+1)

– HopelessN00b
9 mins ago















She supports freedom, even if that includes allowing dwarf throwing. Whether or not she personally supports the practice is unknown.

– JonathanReez
8 mins ago





She supports freedom, even if that includes allowing dwarf throwing. Whether or not she personally supports the practice is unknown.

– JonathanReez
8 mins ago











3














No, he doesn't. He is against laws regulating dwarf-tossing, but not because he supports dwarf-tossing, but because a general rejection of laws based on subjective moral views. That's very different.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Pedro is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • she not he.

    – DavePhD
    12 mins ago
















3














No, he doesn't. He is against laws regulating dwarf-tossing, but not because he supports dwarf-tossing, but because a general rejection of laws based on subjective moral views. That's very different.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Pedro is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • she not he.

    – DavePhD
    12 mins ago














3












3








3







No, he doesn't. He is against laws regulating dwarf-tossing, but not because he supports dwarf-tossing, but because a general rejection of laws based on subjective moral views. That's very different.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Pedro is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










No, he doesn't. He is against laws regulating dwarf-tossing, but not because he supports dwarf-tossing, but because a general rejection of laws based on subjective moral views. That's very different.







share|improve this answer








New contributor




Pedro is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer






New contributor




Pedro is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









answered 14 mins ago









PedroPedro

311




311




New contributor




Pedro is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Pedro is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Pedro is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • she not he.

    – DavePhD
    12 mins ago



















  • she not he.

    – DavePhD
    12 mins ago

















she not he.

– DavePhD
12 mins ago





she not he.

– DavePhD
12 mins ago



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