 I'd like to thank you for your presentation on the book. I'm a Jordanian journalist. I just wanted to make two comments to ask you a question. First, about the refugees, or they become more than half of the population, like, in the case of Jordan and the Palestinians, that's one. To my understanding, now Jordan has closed its borders. Now, no, the refugees are not allowed in anymore, because the country cannot have that happening. I wanted to ask you, when you talk about mainstream media, can we really replace the word mainstream with Western media? Because you've got Ajazeera, who have been doing a really great job, I think, in Iraq, and have really changed the stakes internationally. I read a book by, I forgot his name now, a former American Marine, who is now working for Ajazeera International. And in his book, he talks about how he was treated and how he was called a traitor, and everything that happened to him when he left the army. I wanted to ask you, how are you received in the States? And have you been bothered? How easy was it to move around in Iraq? How easy was it to go into Iraq, out of Iraq, when you talk about moving there? I was thinking all the time about kidnappers and the horror stories we hear. So can you tell us a bit about that, and how are you received there by the mainstream media? Yeah. And thanks for pointing that out about mainstream. I was definitely being American-centric there. I meant mainstream Western media, and even more specifically mainstream United States. Because you're right, Al-Jazeera Arabic continues to do a phenomenal job. I think they're one of the best news outlets on the planet, if not the best. And with me, I have not had any direct problems of going in or out of the United States, going in or out of Iraq, working in Iraq, no more than Iraqis do, or anyone else, aside from dealing with the daily risks and threats and having to be extremely careful and taking what precautions you can. And I think a lot of it was just luck. I mean, you do what you can, and then at the end of the day, you're just throwing the dice. And hopefully, that car next to you is not a car bomb, which is what every Iraqi is having to live with. But I haven't, and I think some of the more, not covert, but other ways that I have been affected in the United States would just be censorship, that the corporate media just will not run this information. I mean, there's a reason why my publisher is Haymarket Books, an independent publisher, which I'm really grateful they published my book, because none of the other big ones would touch it, because they don't want to report on this information even after a lot of it's been admitted by the military itself. So ironically, the idea of actually national coverage, I was on Al Jazeera International. I've done short radio interviews on BBC World Service, BBC NewsHour. I've been on national media in Italy, and Denmark, and Greece, and Turkey, and basically, and I've been on CBC in the past, but basically everywhere but my home country. So it's kind of an interesting trend.