 Yeah, we on boss talk one on one. One on one. Yeah, we going to talk. What it says United States versus Ricky Ross. And after I saw what they was doing, Sam Hussein, I said, man, they will use all that to bring you to justice, to their justice. So you keep saying your name. And I keep thinking about Rick Ross and how he, how that, all that happened. And you was real strong on that when you first came home. Because I'm telling you, I was really in tune with you. I was in, you know, places you was at. And I know you was fighting for that. Whatever became of that. They say I should have filed two, no, no, five days before I got out of prison. I think that's what the judge said. She, she, she, she let them win on statute of limitations. But you know, it was, it's tough on the judge. You know, you, you got a white judge and I'm suing white companies, good white companies. You know, who ain't did no crime in a long time. Yeah. Nobody don't know what crimes they committed. How did that affect you? When did you, did you just, I'm on to the next thing. I was hurt the day that she, she did it, you know, because I was totally thought that, that, that, that we were going to win. Yeah. You know, I was, I was totally under depression. No way we're going to lose this one. So I was a little, little hurt, little disappointed. I probably was more disappointed though, when they gave the documentary away. When they told me that, that, that he believed that the guy, when the guy told him that I avoided the contract, he believed that, that I really did avoid, avoid the contract. And he didn't have no proof. Well, he had the guy who, who, who, Mark Levin, who directed the documentary, they had his proof. He was proof, you know, and he's a good white guy. Yeah. You know, he ain't never been in jail before. His were against yours. And then it was an African guy named Mike Mangry, who I brought on to the peace. You know, I wasn't going to let Mark do it. Mark didn't want Mike at first. I was like, no, if Mike ain't doing it, you ain't going to do it. I'll get somebody else to do my documentary. Mike is my man. Mike been writing me and taking my calls. He working on this documentary. So when he came in, Mark liked the way he worked. So then when they did the Obama theory, he let Mike shoot the Obama theory and paid him. And that's what he bought Mike with. Mike, for what, what he did that. So now Mike is like, oh, Mark paying me, Rick ain't paying me nothing. So, but he didn't have enough sense to say, man, if it wasn't for Rick, I wouldn't have been on his piece and I wouldn't have got the Obama theory. You know, because it really technically, technically the way I do business, if I would have got the Obama theory, I would have kicked him a little something. You know, yeah, man, he had $5, he had $10. So you go get you one of them old vegan burgers. Yeah. Speaking of that, do you, do you, are you a vegan? I'm vegan. I had to bring that up because he was 31 years. Wow. So you did it before it was popular. Absolutely. That, that's the difference. Why did you choose to change? Ah, I'm a lot of reason. I don't want to see people. I mean, I don't want to see stuff die. Oh, wow. Yeah. I didn't want to see stuff die. I didn't want to be a part of, of this slaughterish mentality that, that America is, is putting down, you know, we fishing all the fish out to sea. You know, we got cows that are polluting the ozone and, you know, but you feel a lot healthier. I don't know. 30 years. I know. I forgot. How, but how easy, how easy was it for you to become a vegan back 37 years ago? Nowadays they make it so much easier with, you know. In the beginning it was tough, you know, just, you just breaking that, that, that, that, that philosophy that you need me to live. See, I believe I needed me to live. Really? Yeah. See, I don't believe that, but it's still hard to stop. Because I know you have beans, you have other things that you can get your protein from. Oh yeah, not now. It's so many things that they, they, they substitute with me. But back then it was tough, especially in jail. You know, my, my diet was mostly oatmeal, oatmeal, peanut butter, beans and rice. That was it. Yeah. And salads and, you know, got tired of it. Well, you know, when we eat, see, I read another book too. The book said, do you live to eat? Or do you eat to live? I do eat to live. And I had to question myself and I was like, wow, I've been living to eat. But now I want to eat to live, which I thought was more important. I think it helps your health too. I've thought about that before because when you really to think about, I can't remember how much do you need, like you can actually go for days without eating. And even when you see people in Africa who are starving, but they only eat like this little bit per day. And they're okay. But then for us who have every, all this food readily available and we can't go some, some hours without eating because we're starving and we use that word lightly to say that we're starving, but we're really not. We're the fattest people in the country, I'm in the world. In the world. We're the fattest people in the world. We obese, you know, that's why this virus is, is really kicking our ass because we're so unhealthy. You know, we do unhealthy things. We think unhealthy, we eat unhealthy, we act unhealthy. And, and, and a lot of stuff like this virus to get in. Yeah, we on boss talk one on one, one on one. Yeah, we gonna talk.