 Yeah, life is getting interesting now. And here's why I think that program is so important, right? It's because we're starting to see these really complicated problems that cross barriers and boundaries that we never used to think about, right? And in the U.S., for example, everything from working with the Alaska Natives, who need to literally move physically and culturally to another location to get them out of harm's way. That has implications for Alaska Native culture. It has implications for Department of Transportation and water and food security, right? But at the same time, we've got giant hurricanes that slam a city like Houston. It's the most urban environment. I think it's the most urban environment in the U.S. And because of what's been happening there in terms of planning and deregulation and disregard for that same environmental justice issue that's affecting Alaska Natives, we saw that impacts grow far worse than it should have been because of the flooding, right? I mean, the neighborhoods that were so vulnerable, the petrochemical waste that's flowing through the streets of the poorest neighborhoods. And one of the implications for how corporations behave within the urban environment, how they behave within society. And of course, in Puerto Rico, we saw another version of that, where you have a location that has been operating, for example, the electric utility. Extremely corrupt electric utility for decades. Now it's faced with complete annihilation. How do you rebuild a place, both in terms of infrastructure and, again, water and food security, when these things happen? What are the conditions that led to that in the first place over the last decades? And these are the questions that you all can address. And the role of science, of course, is essential for that. So this is extremely important. I'm glad you guys are studying these things.