 You know, when we came into independence, it was in the height of the whole war. You know, there was the, there was Nicaragua, remember. There was Angola, the link between Nicaragua, Angola, Cuba, then in a little lighter way, Jamaica with Michael Manly, Guyana, all of these impacted on us. Then you had the new leftists in St. Lucia that were fed from that stream. And they saw an opportunity, I'm speaking, we got pulled into the Cold War. They saw an opportunity of capturing St. Lucia, but using this new leftist element. Now, the person who stood in their way was Luizzi. Luizzi refused to give in, and he had to be pushed aside. So, you had this confusion in St. Lucia with this leadership struggle between the new left and the old left, new labour, no labour, etc. And St. Lucia population got caught up in it. But they weren't really involved, it was a little struggle by a small clique of people. No, it collapsed. The whole thing collapsed, and we had to go back into elections in 1982, which we won. And we won handsomely. Okay, now, what did we meet in 1982? The economy in ruins because we had not only what has happened leadership struggle, remember we had Hurricane Allen, but the banana industry destroyed. So we had to start to rebuild. We had to start to rebuild in 1982. And as a person was there, it took me three years before we got up at the bottom, before we started to move. People didn't know the struggle we had, but we had to help again because of the Cold War. The Americans were very happy to see those guys go. So they came and gave us assistance, gave us financial assistance to start rebuilding. The Canadians helped us, the British helped us, because they didn't want us to go the way of Grenada. Remember, within 21 days of Sinusha's elections, we won the 22nd of February. On the 13th of March, there was a Grenada Revolution. So we got caught up in that. We got caught up in this. That is how Sinusha became. That is why, you know, after the elections, then there was the Grenada Revolution and all this confusion. And then, as soon as we returned by 83, the intervention in Grenada, again we got sucked into external politics. And we had to fight our way and confine ourselves rather than being drawn by it. But use it. Use the situation. We supported the intervention of Grenada in Grenada. So when that was all to the way, we, the Americans helped us to build the roads, the roads away or in the mess. The British helped us to rebuild the banana industry. The Canadians helped us, et cetera, et cetera. G-I-S, serving you better. G-I-S.