 We've got time for, I think, two more questions. I'll ask one and turn to Joy for the final question. Mine changes gears a little bit. Some of the FBI's most visible work is in high-profile investigations. And recent probes, of course, have taken place against a backdrop of partisan polarization and incendiary rhetoric in the United States. To what extent and in what ways can this political climate affect the course of an investigation? And what strategies do you use to try to maintain both the substance and the appearance of even-handedness as you conduct these probes? Well, it's certainly true that we're in an environment and all the work we're doing is in an environment just like everything else in today's world that is hyper-politicized and polarized. And 24-7 cable and social media play their own part in kind of pouring gasoline on that fire. I think there's a difference between people who are unhappy about or angry about the result of something we do versus the way in which we get there. And that's a very important distinction. Our job, our mission, my message to our people is that we are going to follow the facts wherever they lead, no matter who likes it. And I add that last part because what I find increasingly in today's world is that people, at first, they say, oh, independence, objectivity, go for it, go FBI, until they don't like the result of something we do. And then suddenly it's like, whoa, wait a minute. And that's not how independence and objectivity work. Sometimes you're going to like the result. Sometimes you're not going to like the result. Sometimes we're not going to like the result. We can't guarantee outcomes. All I can guarantee is that I'm going to do my darnedest and try to make sure our people do their darnedest to do the work with rigor, with professionalism, with objectivity to get there. And as I said, sometimes the results are going to make people happy sometimes or not. But if we start worrying too much about who's going to be angry about something we do, then that pretty quickly becomes finger to the wind. And that pretty quickly becomes the ends justify the means. And if there's one thing an organization with as much power as the FBI has can never be, it's an organization where the ends justify the means. So the reason I always say, people have said for years, follow the facts wherever they lead. I've been adding, almost since the day I started, no matter who likes it, because if there's one thing I've learned almost immediately in this job is that there's always somebody who doesn't like it. And so we just need to make sure that we stay focused on that. And that's why the importance is of doing the work in the right way. Ultimately, that's what keeps us grounded in the middle of sometimes pretty heated and sometimes even pretty unpleasant political climate. Thank you. Thank you. Joy. Thanks. All right.