 Yeah, we on boss talk one-on-one. So, and I hate to say that, but no, no, no, let me talk to OG Percy. We all got homeboy, you got murder cases, all of my homeboys got two. All of us, but not one or two of them. When I look at OG Percy and I like to say I looked at that documenter and all the people that's in those boxes that you were talking about, different people who died for different causes and things that pretty much caused you to be there making these speeches, man. Does that have an effect on you in the way you live your life? I'll put it like that. The only thing that has an effect on me the way I live my life, shout out to Tookie, man. Okay. That's the effect on how I live my life in Crippin. When I found out what it was really about. When I found out what it was really about. The black redemption part. The blue rage, you can have that. I went through that. I didn't been through the blue rage. When I found out I am part of that book for my life story goes and to get to the end of the book and find out it is a pot of gold at the rainbow. All you got to do is try to keep watching, keep going for it. Tookie taught me that. He taught me just through that book, Bob. I call it the Cripp Bob. You can call it what you want to, but when I read it for the first time in prison and I read it and that Bible, that book, I couldn't read. I'm not a reader. I told you I'm not good on reading, it was just something I better learn. I'm going to learn this book. I learned about Buddha. I learned about all. I read that book. I couldn't even read, but I'm going to read this one. The first book I ever read to the end. The first book I ever read all the way to the end. Hold on, hold on. But I learned. The thing was I learned what it meant. I learned what it meant. I got Crippin wrote all over me, my back, my head, behind my face. That's all over me. I can't get it off. But the thing I learned was what it meant. When you get the meaning, the black rage part, when you get there, I wouldn't spend a minute of time about trying to convince you what I know about Crippin. I cut for you. You're a good man. But wasting 10 minutes with time about kind of you can't convince me or nobody else. You might convince somebody else. I believe what you said it's the first time. The reading is going to say it once, not twice. But anyway, you're a good man. It took you one at the end in a good way. He didn't get the message that people didn't get the memo. They wouldn't let the youngsters get the memo. They wouldn't let the black men get the memo. They wouldn't let them pass it out to the youngsters. They killed them. Melvin being a friend of Tookie and being that you guys started off young together or he was a little older than you, but you started off understanding and walking and dealing with him to beat unseen this guy who's affected way in Texas. And all, like I said, this didn't just start. It ain't just a Texas thing either. It's each state. You can go to Louisiana and find it. You can go to Mississippi and find it. You can go to New Orleans and find it. Did you ever think that it would be that effective as pretty much pulling people into that situation? When you guys started, when this thing first started off. We went through this earlier and I'm going to get the same answer. I want to hear it because I just, I didn't hear it all of these guys. No, we didn't think nothing about this. We hadn't even had sex with our socks off it that long to be thinking about something like this going on. You know, it was three things going on late 70s, late 60s, early 70s. So trying gang banging and pop locking. And all those three things are staples day across America from back then. But it's not nothing really to be proud of about this life. And that's real talk because at the end of the day, you're guilt by association. You think you, the camaraderie when you're going up, going back and forth to jail. When you don't think you're ass away out before that. When you're in silence, your voice. But then as you get older, you see the look in your mother's eyes. You see family members to where you don't see the wrinkles. And you think about all the time you could have been with your mother instead of running around niggas. And you know, you can't paint a picture with canvas with one stroke. So I've been privileged and blessed to see five generations because every 10 years should change in this game. So I know where Texas at in its 30 year, 40 year history. I know where New Jersey I can know about from previous experience when it come to that. So at the end of the day, man, I don't put no titles on nothing. And as far as people, I try to be a unbiased urban analyst when I look at any situation and always try to be fair. But I know this is a time now where we want to make these youths tax payers as opposed to tax burdens. And you know this Crip and Blood, we're not a gang. We're a brand now. And we have to start letting the entertainment world, Nike that make the hats the color of whatever sets you from when you're like the Texas Rangers hats. That's one of the biggest hats selling in all of America because it represents the gangster crimes. So you're talking about global. And so we have to look at how they're exploiting us to where we need to address them like when Jesse Jackson used to go back and do it for Coca-Cola and discrimination. And we need to have people such as us or people that are rooted in this community that have a vested interest in the community where we speak up to help eradicate some of these adverse conditions that exist. And all they come with us with being unity in the community. If we can't get that, we segregate in ourselves. We've had Martin Luther King die, gets brave. We don't want from water hose to choke hose. Nothing's changed. But we can have to ask that some people have to stand up and do every other race get along together. We try because we isolate ourselves to where it's the crab over the bucket, everybody trying to hold it still. When there's no big use and no eyes and this shit, it ain't hard to do. Thank you.