 I'm going to scroll up and see what people are talking about. Thomas, for a long time in the UK, you were required to study another language for a year, which felt like such a waste of time. Either make people study it for years so they can actually have a chance of really learning the language or make it totally optional. A year studying a language really doesn't help in my opinion. And nobody took it seriously. Here's the thing, Thomas. For me, they made me steady French for grade eight, nine, ten, eleven for four years at school, right? I didn't learn how to speak it. I didn't really learn how to write it. I cheated all the way through. I didn't give a rat's ass because the first year when they said, oh, you have to take you have to take a second language, I told them, well, I already have two other languages, Armenian and Farsi. They said, well, we don't recognize those languages, right? What they really meant to say is we don't have the funding to offer classes in those languages. So you have to take this other language, right? And at the time, I was barely two years, three years into trying to learn English. So my English was horrendous and they were trying to force feed another language down my throat. So I took it for four years. And that was the case for most of my peers, most of my classmates. They took French for four years. They can barely say five words, Fenetra. I know, window Fenetra, right? Merci, right? I probably retain more French words from learning Farsi because Farsi uses a lot of French words. Then I acquired learning French for four years in school. I think it should be languages. And by the way, I got nothing against languages. I think everybody should have second, third, fourth language, like as many languages as possible, because every language gives you a different perspective, a different way to interpret life. Right? There are things you can say in English that you can't say in other languages. There's things you can say in other languages that you can't say in English. Robert Anton Wilson said this during one of her interviews, where, and I don't know if this is true or not. He said, basically, it's easier to talk about quantum mechanics, quantum physics in Swahili than it is in English, because Swahili has words that explain some of the properties of quantum mechanics naturally, like it just makes sense. And English lacks those words, right? Now, I think he was just trying to make an example. I don't think that's true. But I'm pretty sure that's true in another language. It must be easier to talk about quantum mechanics in certain languages than it is in other languages than it is in English. There's no doubt of my mind that that is the case.