 Jennifer? Did you see that story about that girl that got involuntary manslaughter for encouraging her friend to commit suicide? Yeah. What do you think about that? Well, I mean, so first, I haven't read the transcripts. I don't know what you actually said. You'd have to read the transcripts, because I don't trust the press to actually convey to us what actually was said. So I would read the transcript. I don't think you can convince somebody. I mean, I don't think you, if somebody is going to commit suicide, I don't think you're convincing them as manslaughter, or you're encouraging them as manslaughter. So while she might be a horrible person to not try to talk her boyfriend out of killing himself, I don't think she is legally liable for that. So let's assume that she really did say, oh, go do it. Or it also depends how she said it. But it strikes me she's probably just a horrible person. But I don't see how you convict somebody of manslaughter for that. Suicide shouldn't be a crime. So it's not like she killed him. It's not like she encouraged him to do what he was doing already. You know, I don't think you can convince people to commit suicide, or incite people to commit suicide. I have to think about it. I'm not sure. But it strikes me as far-fetched the verdict while I think one has to morally condemn her for doing what she did. I'm not sure if there's legal remedy there. So you're saying he had the right to do that anyway, unlike murdering someone else, which obviously you don't have the right to do. You never have a right. If I incite you, and I tell you, go kill Darius and go slit his throat and you get all, then I'm part of the conspiracy to kill Darius. It's still mainly your fault. But I would also be tried as a conspirator, as a co-conspirator to do it. But that is murder is illegal. It's immoral. It's wrong. It's in any judicial system. Suicide is not exactly the same thing. It's not like he was a happy kid living a happy life and she just went after him and destroyed his life and they convinced him to commit suicide as the ultimate act of he was going to commit suicide. She egged him along a little bit. I don't know that that's criminal. You have to ask a lawyer, but it doesn't strike me as that should be a criminal offense. OK, thank you. I'll hear from my lawyer friends tomorrow. You're on. We hear about these occasional cults where the cult leader convinces everyone to commit suicide. I mean, that's different. That's almost a form of physical force. It's manipulating people who are just mentally weak. Yes, I think that's clear manipulation. I mean, again, if the kid had doubts about committing suicide and she just pushed him towards it. And oh, my Apple watch is talking to me. And you know, but he was suicidal anyway. And now she just egged him on. I think the cult leader is very different. I think he's culpable. It's not clear exactly what he's culpable of, right? Now, if he hands them the Kool-Aid, then clearly he's killing them. But if he just says, tonight, slit your throats when you go to bed, he's culpable. But exactly what you would accuse him of, I don't know. There is something I'm sure in the law about taking advantage of weak-minded people or manipulating or brainwashing people. But it's very dangerous and it's very tricky to define what exactly those things are. And I think you'd have to be careful on how you define them.