 So, we are at Camp Frank D. Merrill in Delano, Georgia, the home of 5th Ranger Training Battalion. I'm Lieutenant Colonel Nate Showman, the commander of 5th Ranger Training Battalion. As of yesterday, my first official day on the job and I can't think of any more fitting way to start my command than to welcome the public here to Camp Frank D. Merrill for our annual open house event, which is the reason that we're all out here today. Yeah, so we are at Camp Frank D. Merrill and 5th RTB is pretty unique because of our distance from Camp, from Fort Benning. We are very reliant on the local community and they do an incredible job opening their arms to us, our families, our mission and sometimes our Ranger students. So this is our opportunity to, once a year, give back to the local community, open our doors, say, everybody come on in and let us show you what we get to do here 365 days a year. We do some of the training events that we'll take the Ranger students through. We talk about what it means to be an Army Ranger, what it means to be an American soldier. We let them put their hands on some of the equipment that we use under the safe supervision of our Ranger instructors, of course, and we've got a lot of our local vendors that support us throughout the year out here as well. And so it's just a great event to open the doors to the community and say thanks. So Ranger School is a leadership school. It's fundamentally stripping a soldier down to his or her core and saying, you know, when you're tired and wet and hungry and sleep deprived, can you still lead? Can you be out in front of soldiers and say, follow me? And we're going to do what it takes to complete the mission. And so this school through its three phases is a progressive educational experience in learning what it takes to lead in difficult conditions. They start down at Fort Benning in fourth Ranger Training Battalion, takes them through their initial training. Then they come to us for the second phase up here at Mountain Phase and fifth RTB. And then if they're successful here, then we send them down to Florida to sixth Ranger Training Battalion at Eglin Air Force Base. And so that three phase model comprises their Ranger School experience. And those who successfully negotiate all three phases earn the right to wear the coveted Ranger tab and call themselves Ranger Qualified Soldiers, NCOs and officers. You know, I have several Ranger instructors here on camp who will tell you they came in the Army because they attended this open house event as a high school student, as an elementary school student. And they were inspired by what they saw around them to come into the Army and begin a career as a United States Army soldier and ultimately as a Ranger. And so it is powerful when, you know, a person, an American citizen can put their hands on it, can see it, smell it, touch it, what it means to be an American soldier. And this is an opportunity to do that every year with our open house.