And then also thinking about well, what if your ancestors were the oppressors? What if your ancestors were the ones causing the trauma, then do you have internalized privileged privilege and internalized white supremacy internalized colonization? And I know for me, the answer is yes. Wonder resent, I absolutely have internalized white supremacy. And, and also, we're thinking about how the Irish people were greatly traumatized by, I'm going to call it the great starvation or the Great Hunt, hunger, the great starvation, the great hunger, how they were traumatized by that, and they were really, really treated badly by the British. And the British are actually the cause of the starvation. And that's the reason for shifting language away from the potato famine, which is, you know, everyone knows that to the great starvation or the great hunger is because, yes, there was a there was a blight on potatoes. But actually, Ireland at the time was known as the garden of England, the garden of England, Ireland produced a lot of crops, and actually, because England had colonized Ireland, the British just took those crops back to England, and the Irish starved and so those this massive trauma, but then also the Irish went to America, Canada, Australia, and I've often heard that well, Irish were Irish people were enslaved. And this is not not actually true. And comparing some, you know, the Irish experience to other ethnicities and and groups and I think there's there's a lot of differences going on. The Irish were often indentured servants and so indentured servants meant that they had a certain amount of time that they had to be a servant. And then after that, they were free to do whatever right and they probably didn't have a good good go of it as well. And you know, the, the a lot of communities they said, you know, no, no Irish No, no dogs that type of thing. On on places that Irish will not often welcome, but to assimilate and to get closer to whiteness. Irish a lot of Irish would identify with their oppressors and become as white as possible. Irish were not considered white.