 Here you have a president who, you know, he becomes a national rock star precisely because of killing British soldiers, right? Like it is fascinating development here where again, like the Jeffersodians were very French aligned. And then here you have, again, Andrew Jackson leading this pivot to the Anglosphere. Again, it just just not that far disconnected from obviously wars of independence and war of 1812. I mean, it's just a very fascinating dynamic here. Yeah. Oh, absolutely. I mean, because the Jacksonian movement not only includes Jackson, obviously includes many of his followers. But yeah, you still see it's a little bit of an interesting dynamic. Really after the war of 1812, though there were flare ups regarding border disputes with Canada, or even issues regarding the West Coast and then potentially Texas, Americans, we came to see the British more and more as allies and not as enemies, right? Clearly the British from an average American's perspective was the big bad guy from the Revolutionary War to the war of 1812. But after that there were fits, but this is the beginning of this American Anglo American alliance. And a big reason behind this, and this is why the protective tariffs, when we instituted protective tariffs, we weakened that alliance is because of free trade. We realized it's mutually beneficial. We can engage in trading arrangements and so on. But so yeah, from the support for a American British alliance, sort of informal alliances coalescing around a man who was famous for fighting the British, but that's just the way history goes sometimes.