 I know we can't know the future, but what do you see happening in the next year, in the short term, with all these volunteer citizens and the good demolition? What is going to happen? Another easy question. I love this crowd. No one can say for sure because it's so volatile. We've got Turkey almost daily still shelling Kurdistan, we've got Iran even shelling Kurdistan, we've got Turkey doing airstrikes in Kurdistan threatening invasion, we've got this looming thing with Iran which if that goes off, all bets are off. I mean the whole Middle East is likely to go up one way or another. The total regional war is a distinct possibility, not even talking about all the U.S. bases in Iraq being hit, total uprising across southern Iraq becomes an inferno. Most of Baghdad does just for starters. All the oil infrastructure, the Gulf gone. Oil goes up over $200 a barrel. What's that due to the economy? So I mean all of this just like talking about the first week of if and when that happens and that can happen any time because Bush gave the order a ways back less than a year ago that he wanted to Pentagon to be able to initiate that campaign given 24 hours notice. So I think it's going to be that way. I think it'll just be bang there it goes or Israel gets the green light or something like this. So it's impossible really to predict what's going to happen but I just try to lay out the situation on the ground. They're arming people that literally in some cases a week ago were launching attacks against them just like they did in Pollution. Sometimes days. They're arming them and these people are getting trained. A lot of the times they're doing joint patrols. So these resistance fighters are getting great intel on the Americans. Of course the Americans are getting great intel on them too but this is going to get really, really ugly. And what happens then when God all solder puts his militia back online? What happens when the U.S. stops paying the concern of local citizens or makes a move that some of the tribal leaders controlling these guys decide they don't really like so much or what happens when these groups then decide to start taking on the border organization or some of the Maudi army fighters. I mean in the U.S. is instigating this. So I mean it's so volatile and it's so complex and there's so many groups with so many different agendas and so much animosity towards other groups that it's really, it's impossible to predict and it's literally like, you know, it's like a dry, you know, a lot of dry grass and brush that, you know, just any little sparks going to set it up. And right now my thinking if I had to predict it the spark will be bombing Iran. Because I, you know, one thing we look at the occupation historically there's been these ebbs and flows of violence and consistently the lowest ebbs of violence, the lowest ebbing of the violence or the heaviest ebbing you get what I'm trying to say has been followed by periods of violence never seen before. And, you know, for example, last roughly May, June and July were three of the most violent months of the entire occupation for U.S. forces. And that followed a few months, a few months where it decreased and decreased and we started seeing some of this propaganda. We're seeing, well, look, it's getting better and the attacks are down. Bang, in May alone there were over 6,000 attacks on U.S. and Iraqi forces. It was one of the most violent months of the entire occupation. And right now we are in probably one of the lowest ebbs we've seen of the entire occupation. So, wait and see.