 All right, videos come in from Alexei Navalny's funeral and from the ceremony at the church and then the ceremony at the burial site at the graveyard, the cemetery. And it's quite stunning. Thousands and thousands of people came out, both in these are different people because there's a distance between the two, both at the church and at the cemetery. Think about this. This is Moscow in February 1st of March. It is really cold. You can see how well-dressed they are, how coats and everything. It's cold. There's snow on the ground. But more importantly, in both events, security forces are out in force. They are taking pictures. They are documenting who is there. Anybody who comes there is, in a sense, risking getting on the wrong side of the Russian security forces. They were chanting Navalny, Navalny, Navalny. They were clearly supportive of Navalny. And I think this show of support, in spite of the risk that these people are taking on by being there, is an illustration of why Putin had to kill him. Navalny, for whatever reason, and I don't know Navalny well enough, and I don't really understand the psychology of charisma particularly well, was incredibly charismatic and really brought out and became a symbol of the opposition against Putin and the opposition against the current regime in Russia. Whatever his qualities as an individual human being, he became that symbol. And he really rallied people around him. Now, I don't think he was a real threat to Putin. But who knows over the long run? Who knows if something bad happens? What could result? I think the Russian people are basically sheep and have accepted Putin and accept pretty much anything Putin does. But Navalny stood something in them that scared Putin. And therefore, Putin had to get rid of Navalny and did and did. And there was some talk about maybe there was going to be a prison exchange when Navalny was going to be released together with the Wall Street Journalist in exchange for this guy in Western Europe who sent us a life for murder. But I don't think Putin wanted Navalny in the West either. Putin didn't want Navalny alive. He tried to poison him once. And he sent him to Siberia. And he killed him. And now he's dead. Tchaikovsky, by the way, is unconvinced. In his lecture, Friedman, each of you, he does what he always does. This is a standard practice. I'm only asking questions. I'm only asking. I don't know what the truth is. But I'm just asking questions. You guys can accuse me for just asking questions. But is it possible? Is there an incentive maybe for the Biden administration to actually kill Navalny? I'm not saying that happened. I don't know. Indeed, I have no evidence that that happened. But I'm just asking questions. That's what I do. I'm a journalist after all. So I ask questions. That is so dishonest. That is such a logical fallacy. And it blatant attempt to manipulate people. It is the embracing of the arbitrary, all in the name. This is how conspiracy theories get going. Very few people start out with conspiracy saying, no, this. Yeah, they really do this. The aliens do come down. You say, yeah, well, is it possible? I don't know. Maybe it's true. I don't know. Yeah, I think one of my goals in life now is to do as much as I can in the little world in which I live, which is pretty small, to point out how disgusting, awful, horrible. And what is it? Adam Carlson, a weasel, Tech of Carlson, actually is. I mean, I wasn't very successful in convincing people that Trump was, all of those things. And I probably won't be too successful with Tech of Carlson after all, his interviews have gone millions of years. But what the hell? It's probably therapeutic for me to try anyway, to know that I am at least on the side of justice and truth.