 requires you to know English, right? So one of the things you statements you made that with India and China becoming a global superpower, right, it might benefit it. But what I see is it might hamper this more, right? I mean, as it becomes a global power and it becomes more like no closer to the Western stuff, English might take on the place of a lot of these scripts. And we might lose a lot of these languages, right? That's a good point, but who's to say the Westernization or modernization and writing? I don't say that, I'm just saying that. No, I'm not saying that you're saying it, but I'm saying who is to say that that's what's going to happen, that English is going to be the major item. Because a lot of people are saying that. I'm seeing it in my own village, in my own... Actually, in India, much more than it does in China. In China, it doesn't happen. Actually, it doesn't happen that far. It's like we have to be quite valuable about it. I'm just sure it's not in the language I speak, and it's in English. They can default windows, so in India it's English, but in China, I guess it's in Chinese. Right, because Indians do not enforce these things at the time. They also impart too many languages, so even if they state the unit government decides to, it needs to do it in 15 languages at the same time, which is not as easy as doing it in one. Right, and it's a political thing. I mean, they say that they want to make Kannada part of everything, but it's a political thing. It's got nothing to do with actual... I think it's not even political, it's about money. It's a simple thing is that if you are... So it's a political thing. Yeah. 10 minutes. So I think we can take that off.