 That's a huge point. You didn't go to war with public education. In fact, you bettered teacher salaries, as you say, from on average $36,000 to $50,000 a year. So it wasn't as though you went to war with public education, which maybe is the misnomer about universal school choice, that it's somehow anti-public school. And I would just ask you too, for people that really liked their public school, they say, gosh, universal school choice is gonna kill our small town rural schools. You haven't found that to be true. Other states have not that have enacted this. I have a couple points on that. Not only was Learns not anti-public school, it's the largest investment that we've made as a state into our public schools in decades. We have not leaned in in that way, certainly not since my dad was governor. And so that was really important that it wasn't just, again, about that parental choice and opening up the education freedom accounts, but we also wanna see our public schools succeed and do well. Competition breeds excellence. This is something we know in every area, every aspect of life, education should be no different.