 I can't readily give you a good estimate of the size of that crowd beyond the certainty that no matter what anybody is claiming, the whatever that people claim, it will be much larger than the actual crowd. The reason is people are bad at making appropriate estimates of the size of crowds. It's actually a difficult thing. Once you get more than a few hundred people, it just looks very big. They just pull big numbers out of the air. And then there are all sorts of political reasons why the sizes of crowds get either inflated or deflated. The thing is, the size of a crowd has become a token of popularity of whatever the cause is that gathered them. The area that the crowd is in, actually area in square feet or square meters or whatever measure you want to use for it, and a reasonable estimate of the density of the crowd. In other words, how many on average, how many square feet is each person taking up? At least some of the pictures I saw of the crowd yesterday definitely was more than a more dense crowd. People were really compressed in, but that would be something more on the neighborhood of maybe five square feet per person. One place where attempts at doing reality-based crowd estimating go wrong is unrealistic estimates of the density. Sometimes you will see density estimates of one square foot per person. That's, you know, that's a deadly stampede kind of thing. I mean, it's beyond mosh pit, so that's the problem. The other thing you need, and I sort of referred to it at the beginning, is a decent measure of the area that the crowd is contained in. The best way to get that is with good aerial imagery, something up over the top where you can see the edge of the crowd. The trouble with DC, the District of Columbia for doing this, is there's several barriers to getting good overhead imagery. There aren't any really tall buildings. You know, you've got the Washington Monument, but that's, you know, kind of way off in the distance. The other barrier in DC is it's basically a no-fly zone. You can't have helicopters up overhead shooting aerial imagery, like in most other cities. No drones are allowed. I'm perfectly prepared to believe there were several thousand people there, you know, 10,000 maybe. I don't know. Let's say, you know, still a big crowd of people who obviously were pretty darn fervent about what they were there for. But when you start getting, you start pushing that up into six figures into 100,000, so on. No, that didn't happen.