 All right, thanks. All right, let's go back to you for me. You're welcome to the program once more. And I think the good place to start is to ask that question. Do you think any of these women, these 24 women will bring the jinx this time and be voted in from the ballot box? Honestly, I have my doubts about it. Now, we have one or two women that are very popular. The woman at Damar State seems to be very, she seems to be able to touch the electorate in a way that no other women have been able to do. And so she, out of all of them, may be the one that might have a higher chance of winning governorship. And it will be a welcome development in Nigeria, if you ask me. If we get a woman, a woman governor, then maybe we will begin to see, or maybe people realize that women can actually also step up to the plate and do what everybody else thinks that they can do. Yeah, but in all of this, over time, from all that we have said, it was just once that a woman was a governor for just a short while. So if I try to understand it, is it that women don't get all the support that they require, or is it a thing at the party level, or women not supporting women, or issues of financing? What are the issues really? So they're major issues, not all you. OK, so first of all, the two major parties before now, the PDP and the APC, were not particularly women, was what it is, women-friendly. So you have a lot of women at the grassland area. Lots of women that are ward chairmen, ward converse lads, they have a lot of women at that level. But for some funny reason, they never let their women rise. You will not hear that a woman is running for chairman or running for council. They wouldn't even allow it. Women are not allowed. OK, so one, that's one. On the other hand, I think that the women who want to run also don't have the requisite funding. When you go for a woman and you're going, you're running for elections. I ran for elections in 2019. And you go outsourcing for funding. They would rather fund the men before they fund you. And if you look around the world over, even the NGOs that fund people for politics, it's just a small fraction that actually fund women. So most people are funding men. Yes, there's a lot of lip service to let the women give us. But most of the funding for women is very. But why would they rather fund the men and not the women? OK, so there are, I think there are lots of reasons. OK, so first of all, women themselves, I think that women themselves haven't shown. Let me turn next. Let me say this in approval. They said a woman has to do twice as much to get half the credit. You know, if a man, what a man can do, a woman has to do twice as much to get half that credit. So she has to double up. It's unfortunately the society where we have a patriarchal society. So women have to double up. They have to double to show that they are capable. Because we're constantly having to prove ourselves to people who don't want us to be there in the first place because of the culture. And then the funny part is that if you are that kind of a woman, then you have issues. They can't start saying that you're too hard. You're too tough. You're not behaving like a woman. You know, you constantly get those calls. I had somebody telling me, and the Bible says women should submit to men. I said, excuse me. Where did they write it in the Bible? That the woman must submit to a man. It's not there. It's there. It isn't. Let's leave the Bible out of this. But it is there. It isn't there. It isn't there. So let me tell you what it says so that we can make it clear. This is what I tell people. A woman should submit to a man. The Bible says, the issue is, you have to submit to your man. Exactly. But you see, every time they read it, they read women submit to men. So if a woman and you're constantly standing your ground, you get a bad rep. Or you get a bad name. People begin to think, this woman is too hard. She's too hard. And that's why a lot of women eventually begin to step back. Let them not think I'm too thoughtful. Let them not think, you know, which is another woman we may have. They have to put that above what people think about them. All right, let me ask you. You run for House of Reps in Lagos under the YPP. Tell us your experience and what has changed from that time and today. OK, so for YPP, YPP was a party that was, one of, at that time, it was a party where they were willing to allow the women to run. As in, there was a lot of support for women. There was, you know, and I think I would, I mean, I would say Kings Mogalu was one of the people that really, you know, was behind that movement. He was solidly behind us women, was willing to support and push the women to be part of the politics. And so we're all interested. We all came together and we're working hard to put ourselves out there as a contest for the election. I think this year is a little different in the times that things have suddenly changed. The dynamics for elections changed this year. For the worse or better? The third, I think better, the third opposition, the third force showed up very clearly this year. And so it just changed the whole dynamics of the election system. And unfortunately, even this third force was not focused on women. How many of people in LP really were women that ran for elections? Very, very many.