 Approved voting makes it hard to ignore groups of people. It makes it extreme, it makes it almost impossible, not absolutely impossible, but almost impossible to ignore large groups of people. I mean, there are candidates who win in St. Louis, totally ignoring the black community. People continue that when they're governing, they ignore large parts of the city. And when you ignore those parts, you get issues like high crime and high poverty. Like if you ignore just protesters, then you're gonna get results where people don't work, the community doesn't feel like they're heard, and people on the news and have great ideas, they still don't get them passed in a local government. People don't feel like they're vote counts, they don't feel heard, they're gonna move away, or they're just gonna rebel against the system. You continue to have protests. So I think once again, the beauty is that it's not impossible, I don't wanna say it's impossible. For a policy one standpoint, yeah, you can, there's a slim path to victory for you to galvanize 35 to 40% of the electorate in a city. That's so slim though. It's possible to slim, but it's more likely the path to victory is that, hey, you gotta include folks, you gotta be around the issues, you can't just run on your party platform, you gotta include folks. Prop D in the approval voting really solves a lot of our issues.