 Gregory, we've been talking about when you share from your Facebook business page over to your profile, your personal Facebook profile, you know, what we're trying to do because you're following my Facebook strategy of getting more, putting more comments on the Facebook business page stuff so that you can run ads and have other people see that there are comments and therefore contribute. Anyway, we're trying to bring more of our audience to engage with us on our Facebook business page instead of on a personal profile. Okay, but naturally, most of us get when we're first starting, before we've built up our business page much, we get many more comments on our personal profile posts and our business page posts. Anyway, so we have an example here that Gregory, thank you for being willing to share where you're using the technique that I taught you of sharing just the link to the post in your personal profile, let me go ahead and share my screen so everyone can see this. I'm using Facebook, I'm using dark mode, by the way, that's why everything might be a little different than what you're used to. So we're on Gregory's Facebook personal profile. And Gregory, you basically wanted to share just a little bit of a snippet, like a little overview or like, this is what the full article is about and then let me show everybody what the full article looks like. So this is on your business page. And this is the article that you wanted people to read and comment on, right? So you put the link to this on your profile thinking that you just give a little bit of a snippet and have people go and click here. Of course, people started interacting right here without having read the whole thing. And they started commenting as well. And so, yes, if I were you, I would make it much shorter of a beginning. You know, I might not even put this in here because this looks like the title of an article. And given that you have the title of an article and then quite a bit here for Facebook, in Facebook standards, quite a bit of writing, people think, well, I just read the article. I don't, I feel like I've read enough, I've read enough to be able to engage. So I wouldn't have put this in here. So what I would probably have put is to say I would have put at most something like this at most. Or I might even have said something different. I might even have said something like, and I'm just going to start a new document to say what I might have said. I might even say it's like, I'd be curious about what you all thought of this post. I mean, it could literally be as short as that or you could say more. It's like, I've been thinking about sovereignty and how it relates to, I'd be curious what you thought you see. So therefore, this would be just one sentence and the second sentence and then the link. Beautiful. So can I ask a question about that? Sure, sure. Yeah, go ahead. So, A, I love the simplicity, the elegance of that and that it gives them just the subject pointing towards it. Yeah. And my question is one of the things that I've loved about what you've modeled is the staying clear from seeming to be fishing for for engagement. And so with that, that line makes me, I have mixed feelings about that. This one, yeah, in terms of feeling like I'm fishing for engagement. Yeah, yeah, I really appreciate you saying that. And in fact, Facebook does have, does penalize what they call engagement baiting, but engagement baiting in Facebook's terms is things like red or green comment below and they'd be like, no, they hate that because you don't really aren't sincerely, I mean, I think that's OK to a certain extent, especially if you're like, hey, I have two book covers, which book cover should it be green book cover, red book cover? But a lot of people do this kind of silly things. They do like short ones like vote one, two, three or four. They're they're almost like they're not sincerely trying to ask question. They're just trying to get more algorithmic engagement so that their their upcoming posts will get more. Anyway, I don't want to go into that. But basically, if you if you don't want to do that, which honestly, this is not engagement baiting in Facebook's terms. And I would, yes, I know what you mean that it could feel like, well, very good writing just pasted the whole thing in there. Right. Why did why did you put the link? Which is why I basically tell people I don't even post my Facebook profile anymore. All I do is post on my business page and run ads. And so, George, I have a bunch of friends in my Facebook profile. So what I do is every couple of weeks, if I were doing if I were in the transition phase of trying to bring my audience or my profile over to my business page, what I would do is every couple of weeks I would post the link to my business pages. Hey, folks, did you know that I've been writing about sovereignty and peace and, you know, relationship, et cetera, on my business page? In case you are interested in those kinds of writings from me, go there and then put the link. And then that's what I would do. I really love that. Yeah, that feels for lack of another way to put it in the moment. It feels cleaner to me that I'm telling them exactly what I'm doing. Yeah, but however, however, though, people frequently post links to articles. On Facebook, you know what I mean? Yes. And so you could think of this as a link to an article. Yes. And I could say, here's my latest article. I could do. I could still do. Here's my latest article about sovereignty and peace. Yeah. And and and I could still that same weeks, say, for those of you who have who who might be interested. Sure. And yeah, another way I'm actively posting and have, you know. Yes, exactly. But another a third way to phrase all this would be to say just wrote, you know, just wrote about sovereignty. Especially for those those of us who deal with blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, or are interested in blah, blah, blah, whatever you want to say. And then and then link, you know, so terrific. I really just basically just like anybody would share links on Facebook to anything else with a little bit of a, you know, preamble. Yeah. It's beautiful. Thank you. Very helpful. Thanks very much.