 As a team, the Milwaukee Brewers unanimously decided today not to play our baseball game due to continued issues that we've seen with racial injustice and social oppression. Obviously with what's happened in Kenosha, it hits close to home. It's something that continues to be deeply disturbing and disheartening to all of us. We had a team meeting and as a group, we continue to have conversations about what we can do and how we can use our platform to continue to try to elicit change as we recognize that there are still significant issues in our country. And we made the decision today that the most impactful thing we could do was not play our baseball game to not distract from what's going on in the country. We felt like baseball was insignificant relative to the issues that we all continue to see and that we are disturbed by. We talk about the beginning of summer camp, what these shirts mean and the shirts that we've been wearing throughout the year. And there comes a time where you have to live it. You have to step up. You can't just wear these shirts and think that's all well and good. And then when it comes time to act on it or make a stand or make a statement, you can't just not do it. And that's what you saw here today is us coming together collectively as a group making a stand, making a statement for change, for making the world a better place, for equality, for doing the right thing. And we did that as a group. It was a unanimous vote. Everybody was in favor of not playing and sending a message and a statement. I think they did a courageous thing. You know, I look first of all, what the box did, what the NBA players have done. They've certainly been leaders in this area, but our players did a courageous thing in Major League Baseball. They went first. I'm proud of them for that. And, you know, they had a very good conversation about it, an important conversation, a meaningful one. And they chose to act. And I talked about this the other day. You know, they chose to act. And they said like, you know, I think what they're saying is, if not now, when are we gonna act? We've worn T-shirts, we've had conversations. This was a chance for some action. And they decided to take it and I'm proud of them for it. Sure enough, these last four months, just like everybody else have been, my eyes have been wide opened to just how we need to be treating each other. We need to treat each other better. It's not about how people look. It's not about how big they are, what color they are. It's about loving other human beings like you love yourself and wanting the best for other people. I think that's what gets lost in our, kind of today's day and age about love is it's not this goody, like feeling good emotion. It's about genuinely caring about others more than yourself. And until we are closer to that point, I don't think we're gonna be able to get this systemic oppression under control. We need to really, everyone needs to look in the mirror and say, how can I be a better human being to my fellow man and woman every day of our lives? So.