 Well, I have a real concern for the people who have not been reached by the Green Revolution. And I'm particularly, I now live in Indonesia three quarters of the time, one quarter of the time in Fort Collins, Colorado where I'm affiliated as an adjunct professor with Colorado State. And I just have a problem because my newly found clients are farmers in the uplands of Indonesia. I have an ongoing research and development activity with farmers in the uplands. And they've been basically left behind by their own government in terms of extension services and infrastructure and so forth. And this is an area that, you know, it's like they have been left behind. In the same way they have been unable to receive the benefits of thirty billion dollars of irrigation investment in thirty years. And this is a forgotten part of the population and I've taken it on as a client group for my Indonesian aid foundation. And I go back to the states, to Colorado to raise money, write proposals, and I spend most of my time working on these R&D things like my intensive rice garden right now for the upland farm families. Well, I was affiliated with three different ministries in three different jobs as a consultant and three different ministries, three different jobs as a consultant team leader of World Bank and Asian Development Bank teams before retiring. But since retiring I had already purchased a house, a huge house, and I had added to it and developed an outreach activity called the Indonesian Aid Foundation. And I am sort of the chief technical officer of that and working on projects that fill in some of these gaps that I feel that were really not part of the terms of reference for ERI.