 It's the cumulative effect. Chairman, if I was to draw an analogy, it'd be like smoking cigarettes. One cigarette's not gonna kill you, but you do that for eight, 10, 20 years, 30 years, you're eventually gonna die of lung cancer. It's the cumulative effect over time that is really devastating and the CSAR effect of money in and money out. And also, we can't invest in modernization because industry has to have predictable funding and we can't do that. Not only is it negative on immediate readiness, it's devastating on future modernization because we can't get out in front of it and it's much more expensive when you can't do multi-year contracts. It's very expensive. It's an inefficient, ineffective way of doing the budget.