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Even when issues arise is passage representing a common communistic philosophical narrative in Danterian culture and acting as a non-minimal pangram for the Dãterške language. Little is known about the origin of the text, other than that it was originally written in English by the author Comrade kari edwards and published in a collection of poems known as Bharat Jiva; the original text was then modified & translated by Elliott Wheeler to better fit the narrative and suit the language.
Due to the passage's length, it's been hypothesized that the text could act as a pangram in any language if translated accordingly. In both the writing style of kari edwards and Dãterške, the poem is traditionally written entirely in lowercase-monocase, unless the target language's typographic convention demands otherwise.
even when issues arise and obedience can not be secured by the bludgeon, the bludgeon remains. when we mention the people, we do not mean particularly itinerant bodies in mechanic flux, we mean the confessional body of the people, preaching authority beyond flesh pamphlets of freedom, concealed in blind devotion to distraction. when we mean the people, we mean a people knowing their own strength cast as day laborers, or knowing to a greater part of a lesser known part playing paid intercourse in all connections for the people by the people. when we mean, we mean broke or abrasive worn, once open scream representatives, now incarcerated in a rationalistic shadow land, given a history that merges extruder merchandising with wholesale lots of intermittent idiocy, or objects for understudy beatings. we must demolish the status-quo!