 Actually, earlier when there was a conversation about publicly owned utilities versus cooperatively owned energy, I was kind of thinking in my head, is it possible for those to coexist? Because it's really important for the case of uproads, it's like low income people, people of color coming together to cooperatively own their power supply, and to kind of create energy storage systems and actually have the panels in the neighborhood and actually do the outreach kind of in a hub from the community organization that can kind of integrate both the popular education aspect and the energy supply aspect. So did you want to? I agree with that, but I also think regulation and scale are key. We can do these isolated efforts and feel good about them and provide like help or support to these communities, but if you don't have the structure, who's actually closing the gaps, it's going to become like the system that we, you know, like a checkbox. We have like people of color doing this clean energy and that's right, that's problematic.