 Okay, this is James P. Madonna from the Facebook group Holistic Health Talk. I'm here looking at the Bob's Red Mill Cereals and the problem I have is that very few of them, very few of them are certified organic, which I don't understand. I'm sorry, it says an employee-owned company. Usually, I would say a company started off in health food stores, but since it started off in health food stores, why aren't all of them or most of them certified organic and non-GMO? When I contact the corporation, the main office, they don't reply to me, which is typical of corporate America. You don't get a reply. Okay, again, Scottish oatmeal, all right. It's not organic, wonderful. Oat bran, not organic. Creamy wheat, it's a hot cereal, not organic. Five grains, nothing. All right, here we got organic brown rice, that's one. All right, but that's only one. All right, $4.99. I think people will be willing to pay a little more for the best for non-GMO certified organic. Here we go, corn grits, also known as polenta, not organic. All right, I want to give a shout out to the creator himself, Mario Petrus. I'm really pissed off that this company, I would say most of the Bob's Red Milk products are not certified organic. Here we got this, or here we go. All right, this one's organic. All right, so far I found two, award-winning. All right, that's the least they can do if it's award-winning steel cut oatmeal to have it certified organic. But most of the products are not. Now, I think people will be willing to pay a little bit more for non-GMO certified organic. But this company never replies to me, just like most companies. I hope the people in the store don't think I'm talking to myself. It's a method to my madness. You would think that a company like Bob's Red Milk would be 100% organic, but eh, joke is on me. And that's about it.