 Oh, do you go in like meeting white people? Do you have a pre-assessment on them or something? Absolutely. Me personally, I think. Are you, do you treat them differently? Differently, I don't know, but I treat them accordingly. That's how I put it. So yeah, I guess that's inherently different. But I, America was built on the idea that people with lighter skin were superior to people with darker skin, and that people with darker skin's utility was only to make people with lighter skin rich. And that idea has been pervasive in the culture of the country since its beginning. And as good as a white person might be, that understanding is a part of them inherently, right? So not racist and anti-racist are two different things. So with that being said, I go into any interaction with good faith. And I've actually made a statement that was kind of controversial. I said, not all racists are bad people. What I mean by that is racism, based on how I understand it, is a, first of all, an institution, and it's a culture. So you can be a good person in a bad institution, right? But until you have the awareness and the understanding, it's hard to undo that. I mean, think about even the concept of white supremacy. If every textbook tells you that anything worthwhile was done by white people, you might think white people are a little supreme. If every good thing you see on the news, every hero in a movie, every hero in a comic book, every hero in a Marvel fantasy looks white, you're gonna think white people are the shit. And if every criminal and every robber or a homeless person is black, whether you're a good person or not, you're gonna think, there's something about these white, these black people, for some reason, they always end up in shitty situations. So I think the supremacy is a consequence of the society we created. So I have to be aware of that. So for me, I know that I can't be as aggressive as Timmy. I don't have as long of a leash. I know that I have to be more articulate than Susan. I don't have as long of a leash, right? Because the expectations are that I'm not. Now the good thing about that is that it's easier to impress white people. And I use that to my advantage. But the bad thing about that, again, life is about trade-offs. The bad thing about that is that I'm still just a black man to them at the end of the day. In the back of my head, I always think there's like, they're thinking of me in a certain way, like, off the bat because of the color of my skin. But I just don't, I can't really tell when you're talking to them. They treat you like anyone else, to be honest. Of course, some people, some white people, of course, will treat you different. But to be honest, we do the same thing, though. I've met so many black people that off the bat, I don't like white people. I don't like white people. And then they just closed off to white people and they just only talk to black people because of no reason, too. And then if your friends were the white person, they'd judge you off of that, too. They judge other black people because they're friends with white people. It's just like, I understand like what happened, but like, it wasn't them, like the people that I'm talking to right now wasn't them, like, wasn't their father or mom. So I'm like, a part of me is like a little feels a certain way, but I don't let that cloud my judgment or like with that restrict who I talk to or whatever. But I mean, of course, I know my history. When you talk about white people look at you a certain way, tell me what you mean by that. And usually when I'm talking about like, white people look at me a certain way, I'm talking about older people. So it's the people that were born like 1960s or 1960s or 1980s or whatever. So with the people that are my age, like even in my school, cause I go to a charter school. So it's mainly white people. When they look at me, it's like a regular person, but they always try to make some joke. Like, oh, 4K tray or something about gangs. It's just like, yeah, we get it. Like I've heard it five million times already. So I mean, like they don't, they don't like look at me in a way of like, oh, he's gonna, oh, he's a danger. But like they always like try to like make some type of joke or something like that. Or I think they even try to do the joke to see if you're like okay with it. And then like to see if you're the cool ones, the ones that they can be friends with cause you're the ones that are okay with it. And they want to make those jokes so, you know. So is that racism? That's the one part that I'm like, I think it is a little bit. And that's the one part that I really just don't like about white people, I guess. But.