 This is a different one. This is about journalists in Gaza. This is about journalists who work for the AP and Reuters. The AP and Reuters, two of the entities, we get pretty much all on used farm because they're the ones who have journalists all over the world who are actually on the ground. Well, in some cases, these journalists are literally on the ground. I mean, they're on the ground with the terrorists as they rape and murder and torture. And it turns out that a number of journalists, one of them photojournalist Ashraf Amra, that work with AP and Reuters were right there on October 7, filming what the Hamas was doing, partially because they were embedded with Hamas. But there's also pictures now being shown of them sitting around, in this case, Ashraf Amra, with a couple of his friends sitting around, watching some of the videos of Israeli soldiers, in this case, being slaughtered, just being brutally murdered, and laughing and having a good cheer about it and enjoying the whole thing. Another one, Abu Mustafa. Freelancer's been working for Reuters. And he was like, hey, I was just in Israel. This is on October 7. All of you, you should come. You should, you know, you're saying this on his social media, encouraging Gazans, Palestinians to cross over the fence and go join in the slaughter and in the rape and in the pillaging that was going on. This is a once-in-a-lifetime thing, he was telling them. These are journalists who our mainstream media uses. Is it any surprise that we get the kind of stories that we get? Is it any surprise that this is the kind of screening that our news agencies do where they actually get, where we actually get kind of objective information, not objective information? These people are part of Hamas. They are part of the terrorist organization. They are part of the Palestinian regime that is responsible for the slaughter. And they are reporting on it at the same time. Well, objectivity out the window. But I think that's true in so much of our journalism today.