 STEM and non-STEM-related education are in distinctly separate spheres, so when I'm pursuing my personal education, I can look at a more broader point of view and realize I don't have to focus solely on silence. Science are solely on some sort of other non-STEM activity, but I can kind of meld them together to form something that's personal to me. That the NRC is revealing, and I think that is important for me to also understand for what I want to do in my future, and about some of the processes that happen. Like, if you want to submit a new idea for a new reactor, there are regulations that get the pass, and there are numerous processes you have to go through. And it's not just, oh, I made a blueprint that's suddenly going to be built. It has to be approved first. NRC is, whether it be through press releases or historic documents online, like we just learned about a database where they have, like, tons of documents that people can access and I thought, like, the information would be a bit more classified because it deals with, like, nuclear power plants and all the development of, like, nuclear transport facilities and such. So I was surprised by how transparent everything is.