 The great things about the HCLU videos and just generally videos of these kinds is it actually gets a voice out that wouldn't otherwise be heard. Generally the voices that we hear talking about drugs tend to be of people who, you know, political leaders or police voices or enforcement voices, occasionally health voices, but very rarely do you hear activist voices, very rarely do you hear civil society or NGO organizations. You know, almost never do you hear the voices of people who use drugs. You know, people who have been incarcerated, people who are sex workers. So I think one of the strengths of these sort of videos coming out, you know, and what are essentially internal movement videos that get presented to the public, is it actually allows, you know, our movement themselves to define our own messages and not have to be mediated through sort of, you know, new screening processes that try to turn it into something that it's not or sensationalize things in a way that's not productive or oversimplify messages in what are really complex sorts of areas. So I think doing these types of videos is a really, really great tool to help get our messages out.