 Douglas, you know, in addition to his abolition work, I would say the second cause that was most dear to his heart was the cause of women's liberation. And so he was present in 1848 at the Seneca Falls Convention, the famous women's rights convention. And the suffrage leader, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, said that she never met a man who understood the degradation of women as well as Douglas did. And Douglas, you know, a lot of the same arguments that he used in critique of slavery, he used in critique of patriarchy, and he defended the idea that women were the owners of themselves and that they could not be virtually represented by their husbands and their fathers in the political sphere, that they needed to be able to represent their own ideas and interests. And he also defended the idea that women could disagree with men and still get along just fine. And so that was another really important aspect of his attitude toward women's rights. He thought that it was okay if women got involved in politics and found themselves in disagreement with their husbands that this wouldn't bring about the end of marriages. It would actually introduce an element of excitement in marriages and also sort of promote a more comprehensive discussion of all sorts of political issues that were present at the time.