 I guess what is like the state of autism awareness in places like the Ukraine? It's getting better, but I will say this compared to say Western Europe, England, and France and in those areas, it is behind, definitely behind as far as autism and autism awareness, they are very, they're still behind. They're definitely, it's not their fault. It's just been they, they're still a modernizing Western, you know, Eastern European country, but with, modernizing with Western ideals. And that takes years, right? Because being a part of the Soviet sphere of influence for so long, and then coming out of that becoming a democracy. And then with all the internal politics that have been going on in their husbands, you know, you know, different changes in government. And then, you know, they, of course, they had a Russian backed president, you know, before 2014. Then he was ousted and then they had a supportive Ukrainian president, national, more of a national president, nationalist president that was pro-Ukrainian. The Russians didn't like it. So, and then they wanted to take back Crimea, and they did, and then and on, onward and onward. And so autism has really been on a backburner out of many backburners, but trying to modernize its Western thinking. And that thinking doesn't just come easily. It takes years. Same thing we're trying to do in Canada is modernize the thinking of more peer autistic programs developed by autistics and nothing about us without us. And much like in the UK and in the United States, certainly, yes. There's a lot of things that come into play, and that's part of all the social dynamics that have to come into this. And so there's that. What about, what about, like, Russia? Like, do you know that? Do you know about, like, the state of autism awareness in Russia? It's worse. Russian in Russia, it's Russia has not and Russia has not been, it's not an open society. I talked into one Russian earlier on in the war. There's no mental health support. There's no, and no worrying about being different, and especially if you are, if you are gay, if you are LGBTQ, Putin does not like that. The government will go against that fully. And people are being arrested. People were being hurt. Some were being killed. That all, that's a minority group that is definitely oppressed in Russia. Doesn't matter what the people say. Yeah, it just, yeah. Because I guess, like, one of, one of the things that, you know, because we're talking about, like, the effects of the Ukrainian war, like, it's not, it's not, I suppose it's not only, like, civilian Ukrainians that are affected by this whole thing. It's also the Russian Ukrainians. And I did the Russian Ukrainians, the autistic Russians that are being affected as well. And I did recently did a sort of an anonymous interview on my Instagram. And I was talking to this, this, this lad from Russia. And he was saying exactly the same as what you're saying. He's saying that all, like, the provisions, like the medication, the, you know, sort of the general sort of attitude of, like, the government as well as the people towards people who are diverse, whether it's sexuality, whether it's autism, whether it's, you know, whether it's neurodiversity. I mean, it's too bad, eh? It's just, it's too bad. I mean, you think that, you know, after the fall of the Soviet Union, that there's always the sphere of trying to bring the Russians into more of a modern way of thinking and a more Western way of thinking and a democracy way of thinking. And there's a lot of corruption that came in with that. And then there's a lot of, and there was corruption in the Soviet era as well. But also there was certainly Russia with Vladimir Putin. You come into a man of the old way of thinking, the KGB, an old KGB style man, way of, and a exclusionist and nationalist Russian way of thinking. And, you know, thinking that the West is the enemy and, you know, that's the same expansionist and Soviet way of thinking, if not Tsarist way of thinking, you know, in some ways. Tsarist. I'm not too upon what that means. Well, Putin, one person has ultimate power, the ultimate power was Tsar Nicholas II and his family were in charge when the before the Soviet era took over. In 1917 there was the Bolshevik Revolution. And the Tsars were, the Tsar, Tsar Nicholas II and his family were taken out of power. And the Soviet era became, you know, a socialist and communist rule. Yeah, one bad government lead to another, in a sense, just another form. Well, I guess like, so obviously we've understood that, you know, things are not looking great for autistic people. I don't like to say both sides of the war because I don't, you know, I'm not like angry at the Russian people, I'm angry at the people who are in power and I'm angry at the people who are affording people to go to war. And obviously there are going to be some Russian individuals who, you know, they believe what they're saying and then they believe that the people who are doing all of these actions are just absolutely horrific and, you know, not putting humans in the best conditions. I'm sort of dancing around the topic because it's such a horrible thing that's happened and I feel sometimes a little bit I don't know, I think there's a concept that you have around like survivors guilt and stuff and I feel like every day that I'm going to work, that I'm worrying about very minor first world problem, things like that, that I'm, you know, I'm not involved in the horrible things that are happening and are happening at the moment. And it's sometimes quite hard to speak about it because I don't feel sometimes very involved in that and I don't want to like speak for people or I don't want to get anything wrong or like, I just find that the whole thing of war is that it's very messy, isn't it? Like, yes, it's very, very messy and that's the thing. From both countries, from different perspectives, different political spectrums. It's so hard sometimes just to get a clear picture of what's happening. Oh, absolutely. And that's, that is a serious, that's a serious thing when war is going on. It's the fog of war and that's, and Ukraine is doing very well. I mean, you look at Kharkiv, the Russians have been pushed out of Kharkiv. The one is collapsed, the Kharkiv Oblast in the east. And the Ukrainians are counter, once I've launched a major counter offensive in Kyrsan, they're doing well. And the Russians are doing terribly. They've lost, while the Ukrainians say they've lost over nearly 53,000 troops. The Americans and the British will say it's slower than that. But again, the Russians will say, oh, it's all fake news. And so, I mean, but the Russians are doing terribly, and the Ukrainians are taking back their ground. And it's just, it's, that's good, you know. Yeah. It is, it is. I think, you know, it's, it's, it's an amazing figure. And I, from the news that I saw in the UK, or on social media or anything like that, it seemed like it was, you know, a matter of weeks before, like, the whole, the whole the Ukraine was, was going to be taken over and it's, and we're going to have to get all of the NATO involved. And like, it felt very, very, very, very, very, like it was going to be like a really quick thing. And, you know, that was months ago. And it just seems to keep lingering by and, you know, all of, all of the, the press and all of the media that's in the UK at the moment is, it's all about like the queen or like the celebrities and like, it's, it's really, I understand. I get it. I get what nobody wants to hear about war all the time and horrible things happening. But it just feels a little bit disillusioning sometimes to know that these things are happening right now. And we're all focusing on our own first world problems and first world news and like, you know, I'm saying