 There are many people who have university degrees, who have, you know, what is considered professional careers and high-paying jobs, who still cannot afford homes because of the market. It is not a matter of going to university. How much does a uni degree cost these days, just by the way? How much is our interest going up and out, Hex, just by the way? It's not a matter of just simply going to university and getting a higher-paid career, when the careers that you would get, that would get you a three-bedroom home in a suburb close to amenities to public transport to schools, hospitals, and all of those things, those homes, you would be able to access with those incomes 20 years ago when you entered the market are impossible for anybody to access these days. And that is just the reality that we are living in. And I feel like that perspective gets lost, that young people, we are real people who are living through this life and going through all of this, you know, dealing with it all, only to be told that we need to work harder. It's like, how hard do we have to work? Because I don't have a spare minute of my time that I'm not working to try and just get through and we're supposed to work harder. It's like, where? Tell me, like, honestly, how much harder do I have to work? How much longer in my life am I going to have to work? Just to have stability. Like, it's just, I don't know, perspective, please. Authorised by Jay McColl, Australian Greens Canberra.