 So today, social media with the internet really has opened up a whole new world for us to communicate. But some of us aren't doing it so well, and some of us are taking it a little out of context. In the floodings in Millington, Facebook or social media was critical in getting the word out to where shelters are and what is closed and where they can find help. And it's not because people were just relying on social media. It's because they couldn't get to their homes because of the flooding. But on their iPhone or their iPad or their laptops they had with them, they could access that and get to social media. So the bad, having a false sense of security for you to go into any Facebook site or social media site and make comments that are derogatory about your command, your co-worker, your military, or a policy or those kinds of things are as if you were saying it to your commanding officer, to your command master chief, or to the chief of naval operations. And as we change in the United States military and in the Navy and in society, our instructions, policies, guidelines have to evolve with it. Navy's Chinfo, chief of naval information, you'll find the social media handbook. And so you can Google, you know, command social media handbook, Navy's social media handbook and find it. You can talk to your public affairs office. They have a copy as well. And in this guidebook it talks about, you know, the good, the bad, the ugly. And this is where our policy, SECNAV and Chinfo guidelines are laid out for us. So whatever you say in these sites isn't secret and isn't confidential and can be used when it's necessary to call you into question on behavior or in violating a UCMJ. You still wear the cloth of our nation 24-7 even as a keyboard cowboy in the privacy of your own barracks room or your home on a Facebook site. You're still a military member and your word is still something that we're reading, whether you think so or not. Don't wait for things to happen to you. Make them happen for you.