 You cannot necessarily force a politician to have a news conference, but a politician, of course, does repeatedly have to provide information to voters, provide information to constituents, they have to speak to lawmakers. So I think the first step one would do would be to fact check the statements they make in those, in those, in that spear. And secondly, you have politicians will often make promises. You can begin to catalog what those promises are and whether they have begun to fulfill those promises. It's known as, in the fact checking trade, it's known as promise checking. So again, those are things you begin to vet and rate the accuracy of statements they make to key constituents, to lawmakers, whether or not they are fulfilling the promises they have made. And I think from there you build a baseline that might require a politician to actually begin to answer questions. Because if you were able to document, for instance, that they are not fulfilling their promises, they might feel a need to explain themselves.