 It was a bit of fun. OK. It'll be all right then. No, it was great. Did I do it? Do you feel bad? No, I'm happy. I just think they're all delirious. No, I am. It's a nice bit of cash. It is. It's lovely. And it was great to listen to as well. All right, thanks, Lee. Cheers, mate. All right, take care of yourself. It's the 9 o'clock noon show here in Highland Radio. Our Friday panel about to join us to discuss some of the big news stories of the week. But first, at 9 o'clock, we get a news update and it's good morning, Donald Kavanaugh. Thank you, Greg. Good morning. The motion of no confidence in the government. The party confirmed the move this morning. The motion will be brought before the doll next week. They have challenged independence not to support the current government, which lost its technical majority after Dunlegal TD, Joe McHugh resigned the Finnegwell whip and voted against the new defective block scheme. Sinn Féin's agricultural spokesperson, Matt Carthy, is rejecting claims that the motion is a waste of time. We have a responsibility, I would argue, an obligation to hold government to account and to challenge a government that is failing. The government have been in office for two years. As I say, if you look at all of the big parameters, all of the areas on which people need government to act and act decisively and act in a way that actually delivers for them, government have been failing. Over 5,200 people have been waiting over five years for hospital treatment. According to freedom of information figures, they're looking for an outpatient, inpatient or day case appointment. Gov University Hospital is the worst affected, nearly 800 people waiting over five years for appointments there. Some of those will be from Dunlegal. Well, Dunlegal GP Keir on a ferry says, while five years is an inordinately long time, lengthy waits are the norm. The norm for us for many services is expecting people to wait over a year and you're warning them of that. And unfortunately then, as GPs, we're trying to deal with them on a day to day and a week by week basis to try and maybe manage their symptoms, making frequent calls, writing repeated letters to try and get people access to the service that we feel the needs. The number of individuals and organisations being targeted by the Criminal Assets Bureau in Dunlegal has fallen substantially. The Bureau's latest annual report shows 28 targets in the county at the end of last year, down from 48 at the end of 2020. That's a drop of nearly 42 percent. The figures show Cab is investigating almost 1,800 targets across the country, including 27 individuals or crime gangs not resident in Ireland. And Facebook and Instagram could be shut down in Europe as Ireland's data protection commission plans to follow through on an order stopping them transferring data to the US. Parent company Metta has repeatedly threatened to cut off the sites claiming transferring European data to the US is vital for its operations. However, European authorities continue to have ongoing privacy concerns about the storage of information in the US because of surveillance programs there. The Irish Independent's tech editor Adrian Weckler says the Irish data protection commissioner, Helen Dixon, is taking the lead on this. She has sent her draft decision.