 The fourth one we want to talk about is they're always right, they are always right. Always. Rarely, if ever, admit fault, inaccuracy, misspoke, oh I didn't mean that. They're always gonna figure out a way to shift blame, shift focus and basically never be culpable for any of their actions, behaviors or words. No one wants to be in business with that guy. Orgal. No. And it's not fun to be on the receiving end of that. Can I, I want to throw some props to a fellow podcaster who was recently caught in a conundrum with this very thing and watching this person take responsibility and say I could be better with something that I loved hearing and seeing and I thought it was wonderful. And Joe Rogan recently had gotten into a bit of a tiff with some of his listeners who feel that he didn't grill Jack Dorsey hard enough on some questions and that they've had and of course Joe is wonderful. We listen to his show. Pop of his game. But he does put out a lot of content and because of that sometimes he's not as well prepped as he could be for certain shows. They're always misfires. We have so much stuff going on, we're trying to do a show week and sometimes I come in here a bit scattered and I'm trying to put it together because I want to give the best show that I possibly can. We certainly know what that's like and we know that Joe's going to do that. And put in so with the flak that he had gotten, not only published one online, but then one is next guest Sam Harrison and talked about, yes, that was my fault. Yes, I blew it. Yes. I'm going to make up for it. I'm going to eat some humble pie and some crow and I'm going to work to get better. And I let one side and I got caught out for it. And I just thought right on. Yeah. And it's not easy to admit fault when the stakes are that high when millions of people are paying attention and you're like, Hey, I screwed up. I didn't get it right. How easy would it have been in that moment for him to go, you know what, fuck you guys. Yeah. You're going to listen to whatever I do. So I'm moving on. Like that could have been and I've seen those kind of people. I'd seen those people a lot. And so that's off Joe. Now when we're talking about being always right, we're not talking about playing board games or trivial pursuit here or just being the smartest person in the room. We're talking about, again, gaslighting, changing the backstory, changing the past so that they're always right. And they will do this in overt ways. They will do this in highly manipulative ways. They will even lie and cheat behind your back to prove to other people that they were right if they find that you're in complete disagreement and you've dug your heels in. So imagine being friends with someone having a falling out and then behind your back, they're running around and saying all these things that didn't happen because you're saying they're not right. Yep. They're behaviors of someone who's a toxic individual.