 I think that the most important thing is to keep on raising international human rights standards as a measure of how we can pressure on governments like China and Hong Kong. The reason I'm saying this is that they sign and rectify a number of international treaties, and they are actually also members of the United Nations. And then even China is also a member of the UN Human Rights Council, and there's actually zero excuse, there's no excuse for them to say, sorry, I don't follow your standards. But just you sign and rectify them. And even like for some of those treaties, they even like put them in the domestic laws to, you know, to, you know, although not that perfect, but still they will include elements in their laws. So how can they still make any excuse at all? So for like Xinjiang, exactly like for forced labor, the most important questions that we always ask people to ask. Actually, we don't want to argue the substance with you first. Why don't you give and give access to independent human rights experts. You will end up with tools to have access to do the independent investigation. I'm not even arguing your point, but you just allow access. But even that, that would be a big questions on like where the China would allow. And that's applied. This would seem like the situation in Hong Kong, whether you allow Hong Kong to have an impartial debate. I mean like among citizens here and also with people overseas about what's happening in Hong Kong.