1986: Youngstown State, trying to boost morale to the  economically devastated region of northeast Ohio, hires Ohio State  offensive assistant Jim Tressel as head coach.
November 17, 1987: Ohio  State fires head coach Earle Bruce after three straight losses. Four  days later, Bruce's final game as head coach is a win in Ann Arbor over  Michigan.
December 31, 1987: Arizona State head coach John  Cooper is hired by Ohio State to replace Bruce. Conventional wisdom  says Cooper became the most appealing candidate to Ohio State because of  his victory over Michigan in the Rose Bowl 364 days earlier.
Spring, 1988: Quarterback  and Youngstown native Ray Issac arrives at Youngstown State. Around  this time, Tressel introduces Issac to Michael Monus, chairman of the  Board of Trustees at Youngstown State and CEO of the drug store chain  Phar-Mor. During their first meeting, Monus gives Issac 150 dollars, the  first of what will become a habitual series of payments that will total  roughly $10,000.
December 21, 1991: Isaac quarterbacks Youngstown State to a 25-17 win over Marshall in the I-AA National Championship Game.
July, 1992: Youngstown  State chairman Michael Monus is indicted on fraud and embezzlement  charges related to cooking the books at his drug store chain, Phar-Mor.  The case would become known as one of the largest cases of corporate  fraud in U.S. history. During the course of the investigation, Monus's  relationship with Ray Isaac is brought to light. Tressel says he has no  knowledge of Monus's payments to Isaac.
January, 1994: The  NCAA delivers a notice of allegations to Youngstown State. Tressel,  along with Youngstown State Athletic Director Joe Malsimur and  Youngstown State President Leslie Cochran assure the NCAA that they will  conduct a thorough internal investigation into the matter. This turns  out to be a sham, as Malsimur never contacts Monus, and Tressel never  speaks to Isaac. In December 2003, Tressel would claim that he can't  recall whether or not he talked to Isaac about the allegations. Isaac  says he never spoke to anyone.
December 18, 1995: Michael  Monus is convicted of one count of conspiracy, two counts of bank fraud,  five counts of wire fraud, two counts of mail fraud, two counts of  filing false income tax returns, 96 counts of interstate transportation  of stolen goods, and one count of obstruction of justice. He is  sentenced to 19 and a half years in prison. Shortly before this, Monus  and Isaac are both implicated in the bribing of a juror in Monus's first  trial, which resulted in a hung jury. During this time, Isaac reaches  out to Tressel for help, but Tressel distances himself, saying he  doesn't want to know anything and Isaac should simply cooperate with  authorities.
November 23, 1996: #21 Michigan, losers of  their previous two games, beats 2nd-ranked and undefeated Ohio State  13-9 in Columbus, making this the third time in four years that Michigan  has ruined an undefeated season for the Buckeyes. It is at this  particular game in 1996 that Ohio State fans openly rebel against John  Cooper, hurling insults and obscenities at him as he leaves the field.
March 4, 1998:  During the course of Michael Monus's trial for jury tampering, more  rules violations are exposed at Youngstown State. The NCAA accuses  Youngstown State with lack of institutional control, one of the most  serious violations in the NCAA. The NCAA determines that Youngstown  State's internal investigation in 1994 was not thorough or in-depth.
February 28, 2000:  The NCAA concludes its investigation, accepting Youngstown State's  self-imposed penalties, which include a reduction of two scholarships in  2000-2001, 2001-2002, and 2002-2003. Because the NCAA's statute of  limitations expired in 1996, they cannot take away Youngstown State's  1991 National Championship. The NCAA also chooses not to sanction  Tressel.
January 2, 2001: John Cooper is fired by Ohio  State the day after losing to South Carolina in the Outback Bowl. Cooper  finishes his career at Ohio State with a 3-8 bowl record and a 2-10-1  record against Michigan.
January 17, 2001: Ohio State  hires Jim Tressel away from Youngstown State to replace John Cooper as  head coach. The next day, during halftime of the Michigan-Ohio State  basketball game, Tressel delivers his famous line that has become Ohio  State lore: "I can assure you that you will be proud of our young people  in the classroom, in the community and most especially in 310 days in  Ann Arbor, Michigan."
January 20, 2001: Youngstown native  Maurice Clarett, the star rusher for Harding High School in Warren (14  miles northwest of Youngstown) and the #1 running back recruit in the  country, commits to play for Jim Tressel at Ohio State.
March 21, 2001:  Ohio State cornerback Derek Ross is arrested on charges of driving  without a license and providing false information to police. He is  sentenced to 30 days in jail and suspended for the spring, but returns  for the season and leads the Big Ten in interceptions.
November 15, 2001:  Ohio State quarterback Steve Bellisari is arrested for driving drunk  two days before OSU's game against Illinois. Tressel suspends him, only  to reinstate him and allow him to play in the team's bowl game.
November 24, 2001:  Tressel makes good on the promise he made 10 months earlier as Ohio  State beats Michigan 26-20 in Ann Arbor. During the game, Maurice  Clarett takes an official visit to Michigan on UM's dime, and spends the  game on the Ohio State sideline cheering for the Buckeyes.
March 2, 2002:  Ohio State tight end Redgie Arden is arrested for drunk driving. He  spends three days in jail and is suspended from spring practices.  Tressel reinstates him before the season and he plays in 11 games in  2002.
April 27, 2002: Ohio State linebacker Marco Cooper  is arrested for felony drug abuse and carrying a concealed weapon. In  November, he pleads out and is put on probation.
July 26, 2002:  Ohio State fullback Branden Joe is discovered asleep in his car on a  highway ramp near Ohio State's campus. He refuses a breathalyzer test,  and is suspended for three weeks of preseason camp, along with the first  game of the 2002 season.
July 29, 2002: Ohio State wide  receiver Angelo Chattams is suspected of being involved in a theft, but  prosecutors allow him to enter a program for first-time offenders and  avoid a criminal charge. He is excused from the team, but never  suspended.
August 17, 2002: Ohio State defensive tackle  Quinn Pitcock is arrested for underage drinking. He is suspended for  three weeks of offseason workouts, but is not suspended for any games.
August 24, 2002:  Ohio State wide receiver Chris Vance is arrested for underage drinking.  He is held out of the first two games, and goes on to be Ohio State's  4th leading receiver in the 2002 season.
October 13, 2002:  Ohio State linebacker Fred Pagac, Jr. is arrested for persistant  disorderly conduct. Arrested at 3:45 AM, police say he was intoxicated  and had a role in a fight involving two women, and did not stop fighting  when ordered by police. He is suspended for one game, and is allowed to  play in the National Championship Game against Miami in January.
October 30, 2002: Ohio State long snapper Kurt Wilhelm is arrested for felonious assault. He is held out of Ohio State's game against Penn State.
April, 2003:  Maurice Clarett files a report stating that a car he borrowed from a  local dealership was broken into and thousands of dollars in cash, CDs,  stereo equipment, and clothing was stolen. Clarett calls the police from  a phone in Jim Tressel's office. He is later charged with lying about  the value of the items and falsification of a police report. He pleads  guilty, is ordered to pay a fine, and does no jail time.
May, 2003:  Ohio State cornerback/receiver Chris Gamble and nine other players are  ruled ineligible for signing autographs at a convention, during which  they took an hourly salary.
June, 2003: Ohio State tight end Redgie Arden pleads innocent to his second drunk driving charge in 15 months.
Fall, 2003:  The NCAA begins an investigation at Ohio State amid allegations of  academic fraud and ineligibility. The investigation revolves around  Maurice Clarett, and a teacher admits that Clarett received preferential  treatment. The teacher is fired, and Clarett is found to be in  violation of 14 conduct bylaws, two violations of receiving extra  benefits because he is an athlete. The investigation also discovers that  the Monte Carlo Clarett is driving was a loaner from a used-car lot. To  make things worse, and forcing Ohio State's hand, is the fact that  Clarett was regularly receiving benefits from Youngstown acquaintance  Bobby Dellimuti. Dellimuti provided Clarett with 500 dollars in cash,  and paid for thousands of dollars worth in cell phone bills for Clarett.  Ohio State suspends him for the entire 2003 season. It is later  revealed that Jim Tressel knew Dellimuti and knew who he was before  Clarett's freshman season in 2002.
October 27, 2003: Ohio  State tight end Louis Irizarry is arrested on three counts of  first-degree misdemeanor assault. He is suspended two days later, and is  found guilty of one count of assault, one count of negligent assault,  and one count of disorderly conduct. He is put on probation, and is  listed as second on the depth chart at tight end on Ohio State's spring  2004 roster.
November 16, 2003: Ohio State wide receiver  Santonio Holmes and quarterback Troy Smith are arrested six days before  the Michigan game on charges of misdemeanor disorderly conduct after a  fight on campus in the early morning hours following Ohio State's win  over Purdue. Holmes is held out of the starting lineup against Michigan,  but plays the majority of the game and catches two touchdowns.
April, 2004: Ohio State fullback Branden Joe is cited for a misdemeanor open container violation, his second alcohol-related offense.
May 1, 2004:  Ohio State tight end Louis Irizarry and cornerback Ira Guilford are  arrested and charged with robbery after a student is assaulted and his  wallet is stolen at 3 AM. They both plead innocent, and Guilford is  released on bond, while Irizarry is held until the determination can be  made whether or not he violated his probation from his October 2003  conviction.
May 5, 2004: Ohio State punter A.J. Trapasso is charged with underage drinking.
May 17, 2004: Ohio State punter A.J. Trapasso is arrested for underage drinking for the second time in 12 days.
June 7, 2004:  Ohio State tight end Louis Irizarry is arrested for criminal  trespassing after police pull him over and discover he has been banned  from the campus of Ohio State.
October 23, 2004: Ohio State running back Lydell Ross is arrested for attempting to pass fake money to a woman at a gentlemen's club.
November 9, 2004:  Maurice Clarett blows the whistle on Ohio State, attempting to expose  all of the alleged corruption going on at his former school. He claims  he "took the fall" during the 2003 investigation into his academics at  Ohio State, and is now trying to clear his name. Clarett says that Jim  Tressel arranged for Clarett to have access to several loaner vehicles,  and that Tressel's brother Dick set up lucrative jobs that Clarett did  not have to show up to. He also says that members of Tressel's staff  introduced Clarett to boosters who provided him with cash benefits based  on his performance on the field. Clarett says he would have been  ineligible for the 2002 season, but that the Ohio State coaching staff  set him up with an academic advisor whose only goal was to keep him  eligible. He claims the academic advisor put him in Independent Study  courses with hand-picked teachers who would pass him regardless of  attendance. His allegations are corroborated by former Ohio State  linebacker Marco Cooper. Cooper, who was kicked off the team because of  multiple drug-related arrests, says he too was set up with fraudulent  jobs and was provided with cars in exchange for signed memorabilia.  Clarett says he is blowing the whistle on Ohio State because he feels  they "blackballed" him from the university after suspending him for the  2003 season.
October 12, 2004: Louis Irizarry is sentenced to three years in prison.
December 20, 2004: Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith is suspended for the Alamo Bowl and the 2005 season opener for accepting $500 from a booster.
December 21, 2004:  Ohio State wide receiver Albert Dukes is arrested on two felony counts  of second-degree lewd and lascivious conduct involving a 12 year old  girl. Tressel allows Dukes to travel with the team to the Alamo Bowl in  San Antonio, and the charges are later dropped when the parents refuse  to let their daughter testify in court.
February 16, 2005:  The NCAA reprimands Ohio State offensive line coach Jim Bollman for  trying to set up a recruit with a car, a loan, and a tutor. Jim Tressel  is also reprimanded because Bollman is his subordinate.
May 11, 2005: Ohio State kicker Jonathan Skeete is arrested for drug trafficking. He is suspended.
May 19, 2005: Ohio State running back Erik Haw is cited by university police for smoking marijuana outside a dorm.
May 21, 2005:  Ohio State lineman Tim Schafer is charged with disorderly conduct after  police had to break up two fights between Schafer and another man. Both  men were bloody and smelled of alcohol.
July 20, 2005: Ohio  State athletic officials investigate a possible second NCAA rules  violation by quarterback Troy Smith. Smith attended a quarterbacks camp  run by Tennessee Titans quarterback Steve McNair, but because Ohio State  runs on quarters instead of semesters, Smith may have missed class to  attend, which would be an NCAA violation. Jim Tressel declines comment,  saying the university's compliance department has not finished its  inquiry.
December 6, 2005: Police say that Ohio State  linebacker A.J. Hawk and center Nick Mangold reported a burglary at  their apartment following their win over Michigan. According to the  police report, the robbery took place sometime between 6:00 PM on  November 22 and 8:00 PM on November 23rd. Hawk and Mangold tell police  that $3000 in cash, $1425 in movies, two laptop computers, a $500 Gucci  watch, and $750 worth of PlayStation and X-Box equipment was stolen.  Police were not told about the crime until November 28.
December 22, 2005:  Ohio State offensive lineman Andree Tyree is suspended from the Fiesta  Bowl for a violation of team rules. It is later revealed that Tyree  failed his third drug test.
March 7, 2006: Former Ohio  State kicker Jonathan Skeete returns to the team as a walk-on following  his arrest on drug trafficking charges in May 2005. He was convicted in  October 2005, and despite his status as a convicted felon, he is  readmitted to the university and reinstated to the football team.
April 2, 2006: Ohio  State offensive lineman Alex Boone is arrested after driving under the  influence and being involved in a two-vehicle crash. Jim Tressel says  that Boone will not be suspended for any practices or games.
August 9, 2006: Ohio  State tight end Marcel Frost is suspended for the 2006 season for  violating team rules. Although the athletic department refuses to  comment on the nature of the violation, spokesman Dan Wallenberg says  Frost will remain on scholarship and be eligible to return in 2007.
September 18, 2007: Ohio State wide receiver Ray Small is arrested for driving with a suspended license.
September 24, 2007: Ohio State quarterback Antonio Henton is arrested for soliciting a prostitute.
December 12, 2007:  Jeannette, Pennsylvania businessman Ted Sarniak is cleared of  allegations of bribery as a result of police opting not to arrest  Sarniak in October 2006 when he crashed his car into a utility pole  following the Jeannette-Catholic Central football game. Sarniak smelled  of alcohol, but was not taken into custody. Though cleared of the  bribery accusations, Sarniak has a documented history of providing  Pittsburgh Steelers football tickets and other gifts to police officers  in Jeannette.
December 20, 2007: Ohio State cornerback Eugene Clifford is suspended for violating team rules.
January 17, 2008:  The night before heralded Jeannette quarterback Terrelle Pryor takes an  official visit to Michigan, Ohio State coaches have dinner with  Jeannette businessman Ted Sarniak, who is a friend and mentor to Pryor.
March 19, 2008: Terrelle Pryor signs with Ohio State.
April 11, 2008:  Ohio State defensive backs Eugene Clifford, Jamario O'Neal, and Donald  Washington are held out of practice but not officially suspended. It is  rumored that all three players failed drug tests.
July 7, 2008:  Ohio State defensive back Eugene Clifford's career at OSU ends, as he  is arrested again, this time for assault after allegedly punching two  men in the face. He transfers to Tennessee State later in the month.
July 26, 2008:  Ohio State defensive tackle Doug Worthington is arrested and charged  with operating a vehicle while intoxicated. He misses no game action in  the 2008 season.
December 11, 2008: Ohio State defensive  end Nathan Williams is arrested for shoplifting. He receives no  punishment other than "internal" from the coaches.
February 2, 2009:  Ohio State offensive lineman Alex Boone is arrested after being  belligerant and uncooperative with police while he jumps on car hoods in  a drunken tirade. Boone flees from police, who find him under a patio  and have to taze him to subdue him.
June 11, 2009: Ohio  State running back recruit Jaamal Berry is arrested for felony  possession of marijuana in Miami. He pleas down and agrees to take a  six-month drug program online in exchange for having the charges  dropped. He is allowed to enroll at Ohio State and join the football  team without issue.
September 9, 2009: It is discovered  that violations were committed during Ohio State's recruitment of  quarterback Terrelle Pryor. Pryor's official visit to Ohio State for the  game against Wisconsin in 2007 came with a discounted hotel rate. The  other violation involves former Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith  working at an Ohio State football camp in the summer of 2007, during  which time Smith encourages Pryor to pick Ohio State. As a result of the  hotel violation, Pryor is quietly ruled ineligible in August 2009 until  he repays $158. Ohio State files a request to the NCAA to reinstate  Pryor on August 21, and he regains his eligibility in time for the  season opener on August 30.
April 2, 2010, 2:32 PM: Jim  Tressel receives an email from Chris Cicero, a Columbus attorney. Cicero  informs Tressel that several players have been selling signed items to  tattoo parlor owner Edward Rife, who is under heavy investigation from  the authorities on suspicion of drug trafficking. Rife informs Tressel  of all of this, and details Rife's criminal history.
April 2, 2010, 6:32 PM: Tressel responds to Cicero's email, telling him he will "get on it ASAP."
April 16, 2010, 9:43 AM: Cicero  emails Tressel again, giving details of cleats, jerseys, Big Ten  championship rings and a national championship ring being sold.
April 16, 2010, 11:20 AM:  Tressel responds to Cicero once more: "I hear you!! It is  unbelievable!! Thanks for your help keep me posted as to what I need to  do if anything. I will keep pounding these kids hoping they grow up. jt"
April 16, 2010, 2:26 PM: Cicero  recommends that Tressel ban his players from going to the tattoo parlor  and having any contact with Rife. He asks that Tressel keep their email  communication private.
June 1, 2010, 7:33 AM: Tressel  emails Cicero, informing him that the team will be receiving their 2009  Big Ten Championship rings, and asks if there are anymore names that  Cicero can give him.
June 1, 2010, 4:09 PM: Cicero tells Tressel he has no new names, but that the names he gave him previously "are still good."
June 6, 2010, 9:15 PM: Five days later, Tressel thanks Cicero in what is their last known communication.
September 13, 2010: Jim Tressel signs an NCAA certificate of compliance, which indicates that he has reported any knowledge of any violations.
December 7, 2010: Authorities  contact Ohio State, notifying them that they have raided Rife's tattoo  parlor, and discovered several Ohio State items. The authorities,  obviously unaware of any NCAA implications, are simply inquiring as to  whether or not the items may have been stolen. The Ohio State athletic  department is notified of this the next day.
December 9, 2010:  Jim Tressel is informed that federal officials know about the items.  Tressel still does not inform his superiors of his email exchanges with  Chris Cicero. During the next week, Ohio State plans an internal  investigation into the matter.
December 16, 2010: Ohio  State interviews the six players implicated: quarterback Terrelle Pryor,  running back Daniel Herron, wide receiver DeVier Posey, offensive  tackle Mike Adams, defensive end Solomon Thomas, and linebacker Jordan  Whiting.
December 17, 2010: Ohio State informs the Big Ten and the NCAA that they are preparing to self-report violations.
December 19, 2010: Ohio State releases its report, and declares the six players ineligible.
December 21, 2010: The NCAA contacts the six players, asking for additional information. Ohio State provides this information the next day.
December 22, 2010: The  NCAA notifies Ohio State of its decision: 5-game suspensions for Pryor,  Herron, Posey, Adams, and Thomas, and one game for Whiting.  Incredulously, all six players are allowed to play in the Sugar Bowl on  January 4.
December 23, 2010: Jim Tressel and Ohio State Athletic Director Gene Smith hold a press conference, announcing the findings and sanctions.
January 13, 2011: Ohio  State's office of legal affairs stumble upon Tressel's email  correspondence with Chris Cicero. They conduct a search of the email  accounts of all members of the football staff, and discover that no one  else knew of the players' contact with Edward Rife before December 2010.
January 16, 2011: Jim Tressel is questioned by Ohio State officials, and he acknowledges his contact with Chris Cicero.
February 2, 2011: Ohio  State offensive lineman recruit Chris Carter is arrested the day before  Signing Day on a charge of sexual imposition. He is accused of fondling  up to eight girls at his high school under the pretense of measuring  them for ROTC uniforms. Despite having a confession from Carter,  authorities drop the charges five days later, and Carter is allowed to  sign with Ohio State.
February 8, 2011: During an  interview with NCAA and Ohio State officials, Jim Tressel admits that he  knew violations were committed when he did not report what Cicero told  him.
March 7, 2011: Yahoo! Sports reports that a source  has told them that Jim Tressel knew of the violations in April 2010 and  did not tell anyone else. Ohio State Athletic Director Gene Smith  accelerates the process of the completion of the university's  self-report.
March 8, 2011: Ohio State releases its  report, disclosing Tressel's violation and announcing a two-game  suspension and $250,000 fine for the head coach.
March 17, 2011: Ohio State and Jim Tressel announce that the two-game suspension will be increased to five.
March 25, 2011: It  is revealed that Jim Tressel in fact didn't keep the email  correspondence with Chris Cicero all to himself. He forwarded the mails  to Ted Sarniak, the Jeannette businessman with an affinity for giving  gifts to police officers, and friend and mentor of Terrelle Pryor from  Pryor's days as the #1 recruit in the nation at Jeannette High School.
April 25, 2011: The  NCAA delivers a notice of allegations to Ohio State and Tressel,  accusing Tressel of failing to "deport himself in accordance with the  honesty and integrity normally associated with the conduct and  administration of intercollegiate athletics as required by NCAA  legislation and violated ethical-conduct legislation when he failed to  report information concerning violations of NCAA legislation and  permitted football student-athletes to participate in intercollegiate  athletics competition while ineligible."
May 1, 2011: Ohio  State linebacker Dorian Bell is suspended for the entire 2011 season  for an unspecified violation of team rules, with all rumors pointing to a  persistant marijuana issue. Bell immediately leaves school with the  intent to transfer; his hometown Pitt Panthers turn him away.
May 7, 2011: The  Columbus Dispatch reports that Ohio State will investigate used-car  purchases by dozens of Ohio State athletes at two Columbus car  dealerships. The Dispatch discovers that at least eight athletes and 11  athletes' relatives bought used cars from two specific dealerships  during the past five years.
May 23, 2011: Former Ohio  State basketball player Mark Titus posts a lengthy blog post detailing  his eyewitness accounts of "an unusually high volume of brand new Dodge  Chargers driving around on campus, and just about all of them had tinted  windows and rims on the outside with Ohio State football players behind  the wheel on the inside."
May 25, 2011: Former Ohio State  receiver Ray Small tells the Ohio State student newspaper that he sold  items for cash during his time at Ohio State, and he also mentions that  "the best deals came from the car dealerships." After facing blistering  criticism from former and current Ohio State players, in addition to  Ohio State fans, Small backtracks on his story, saying the newspaper  twisted his words.
May 27, 2011: Ohio State announces that  it will not disclose the correspondence between Jim Tressel and the  Jeannette businessman, Ted Sarniak.
=================================================================
Nothing  Ohio State has accomplished in the last ten years is valid anymore.  From Clarett, to Smith, to Pryor, and all the others in between, with  the cars and the cash and the discounts and the cutting of corners, Ohio  State is essentially an SEC school operating in the Midwest. Tressel is  a proven, documented cheater, and if the NCAA has any balls at all,  they will slap him with a show-cause order, blackballing him from ever  coaching again. He has successfully manipulated his public perception so  he comes across as a righteous, homely, ethically pure gentleman, when  the reality is he's basically a gangster, willing to do whatever it  takes to win, and turning a blind eye toward the corruption that he  himself endorses. He distanced himself from Ray Isaac at Youngstown when  the NCAA came calling. He distanced himself from Maurice Clarett while  simultaneously shredding Clarett's credibility when he tried to destroy  Ohio State. If some injustice is committed and he somehow survives this  latest storm, he will distance himself from Terrelle Pryor and his  friends, too.
Tressel entered into a perfect marriage with Ohio  State back in the winter of 2001. A native son with enormous success at a  lower level, but more than ready to take the next step. And a school so  desperate to reverse their fortunes in that final game in late  November, so eager to erase the sour taste of 2-10-1 from their mouths,  willing to sell their souls at all costs if it means claiming dominance  over "That School Up North." That is the culture of Ohio State football.  The means don't matter whatsoever. As long as the end is a victory over  Michigan, they will tolerate anything that comes their way. And now  they deserve the darkest of fates. They knew what they were getting in  Tressel: a faux-superior thug, who shares the win at all costs mentality  of his followers. They are essentially a hostile regime, with Tressel  leading the masses in "Death to Michigan" chants. And any dissenters,  anyone who dares speak out against the regime - Kirk Herbstreit, Bruce  Hooley, Mark Titus, Ray Small - is thrown to the wolves, their  credibility and character put through the meat grinder by the  bloodthirsty masses. The brainwashed followers, from the dusty streets  of Youngstown to the outskirts of Cincinnati, from the shores of Lake  Erie and Glenville High School to the backwoods of Westerville, and  Centerville, and the epicenter in Columbus, they all march in lockstep  as Senator Tressel commands them. And eventually, he will lead them off  the cliff, and they will follow him without question, even it means  their own destruction.
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