 It is this aspiration to expand the American Empire and you do a great job of highlighting quotes from individuals like Chief Warhawk Henry Clay, even Mattis himself that makes it very clear that if they take over Canada, the goal is not to use this as some sort of bargaining ship to get what we really want, which is just to make sure that we're not going to be molested by the British Militant Navy, that the goal here really is again to expand the American presence throughout North America and Florida and beyond. Yeah, absolutely. So this is the problem of the Louisiana Purchase. So the Louisiana Purchase increased the size of the country by about 500 some odd million acres, this enormous acquisition. So the boundaries of the country have been pushed and that now you have new boundaries. There's sort of this pressure to acquire more territory to strengthen those boundaries. So now that you have a greater presence in the Caribbean, you want to get Florida. Okay. Now that you have a greater presence in the West, you want to also acquire Canada in the North and strengthen your control of the Great Lakes region and so on. And this is really the ultimate goal of Jefferson in his second administration. He comes very close to actually declaring war on Canada and having like a full scale invasion. And then this is sort of continued on in the Madison administration. We of course do not conquer Canada, nor do we get all of Florida during that time. Instead, we just get a small amount of Florida. But it's still important to recognize what the War of 1812 really was. It was a war of attempted conquest. It was not sort of a war where once again standing up to the British as we were in the American Revolutionary War, we were the aggressors. The British weren't perfect before this time period, but they didn't want war. We were the aggressors and we deserve the blame for embarking upon this war that really just led to a tremendous amount of cronyism.