 So, the Navy's Keep What You've Earned campaign, the flagship program for responsible drinking. Keep What You've Earned talks about and is designed to, you know, promote what you've earned, your privileges, your prestige, your rank, your responsible positions, your, you know, choice and orders, your promotability, you know, on your e-vows, keeping what you've earned, sailor the quarter, sailor of the month, sailor of the year, you know, the other Navy programs that are associated with our diversity months, the local programs like first-class associations that recognize junior sailors for the month, all of these things that you've earned, qualifications, your warfare, sea school qualifications, you will lose if you do not drink responsibly and make a poor decision and end up in a situation where you have injured yourself or injured others, whether it's physically, emotionally, financially, or through work. I mean, who's gonna stand your watch? The Keep What You've Earned campaign is out there for us to grab on to something, to some language, to some campaign environment that we can share with each other and educate each other on as a reach back and a reach forward and a reach to the side. When we get into a situation with alcohol and we need some resources, let's face it, most of us do like to imbibe in an alcoholic beverage now and then and that's okay as long as you're of age and you're within the legal limits and the law and just like everything else, you know, I'm not here to tout drink a moderation or don't drink at all, I'm here to tout drink responsibly, you know, drink responsibly. What I'm excited about with the Keep What You've Earned campaign is that it talks about what you've earned and what you can lose if you are irresponsible in your decision-making processes when it not only involves alcohol but other things. So what do you lose? You lose a stripe, you lose a crow, you lose reputation, you lose money, you lose opportunity, you lose respect, you lose your privilege to serve in the United States military. Say for example, as an E-5 and earning in base pay $2,440 a month and that doesn't include your COLA, your special duty assignment pay, your your BAH or OHI, your comrades, your all of that stuff, which can raise it up even higher. But let's just take base pay. Okay, so now you're an E-5, you've done all that, you've made a poor decision, you've gone to Captain's Mass or court marshal and you lose rank and you're reduced in rank to E-4. So now basically for at least three years before you can look at an exam again, right? Three years in pay, in pay grade, right? Time and rate. So for three years, because you were reduced in rank as an E-5 to an E-4, you have lost over a three-year period just in your base pay over $10,600. Now you can double that amount because of the loss of the increase of or the decrease of your COLA, of your OHI, your BAH, your comrades, your special duty assignment pay, which you will lose, and other associated pays. So you will lose almost $20,000 over a three-year period because you chose consciously one night for whatever those reasons to drink irresponsibly and then drive. Only one-third of Americans between the age of 17 and 24 are even eligible to join the United States military. And an even smaller percentage makes it through boot camp. And an even smaller percentage makes it through their first tour. That has the stamina, that has the capabilities, that has the strength. So we are a very elite group of decision makers of Americans that join the United States military. There's not a lot of us that are eligible. So you've already said to the world, you've already said to yourself, to your family, to your shipmate, I'm one of the few that has made this decision, that has made this commitment. Regardless of what your age is or where you're from, you made a commitment and part of that commitment is keeping what you've earned. Don't wait for things to happen to you. Make them happen for you.