Yeah, I was kind of struck by what you're talking about. Well, as well, Lucas, because who's the gentleman? We were just talking about the opera donkey? Yeah. Yeah, he's, you know, he just is very open about his faith. You know, he says, I think at one point, it was God, right, who really had the power and it was his intervention, that that helped to turn that hatred that I had for white people into love into forgiveness. Whereas you had others that I was guessing they didn't talk about God, but they were dealing with the issue of how do you deal with hatred, you know, this hatred that's killing people, it's eating them up and destroying them. And they're kind of their solutions or their methods, whether they were Christian or not, what struck me about them was that they tended to be the way I would say it is rooted in kind of biblical principles, you know. And so it all kind of came back whether they were Christian or not, that kind of struck me but I was watching the documentary just having we homeschool our kids as well. And I just had finished reading to my my daughter, I teenage daughter, the book Unbroken, you know, the Louis Zamperini story. And that's very much the theme of that that book is well, you know, here, Louis Zamperini is in a Japanese prisoner of war camp and he's just brutalized, you know, by this Japanese prison guard, and he's just deeply wounded, you know, by that. And he comes home after the war with just a seething hatred and just use overwhelming desire to get revenge. You know, all night, he just is up dreaming of ways he can get back to Japan to murder, you know, the sky to kill him. And it shows to me the power, you know, that there's a satanic power behind this, right? It's a wait, it's like, it's, it's just so powerful. And for him, the, the turning point is when he goes to a Billy Graham crusade, and you know, he, his wife kind of drags him, he doesn't want to go, it's the First Crusade I think, in Los Angeles back in the 19, late 1940s, early 1950s, and he gives his life to Christ. And it was like an, it was a miracle, because that hatred immediately turned into forgiveness. And so he just now it was how do I get back to Japan to find this guy to forgive him? And it's so moving, it's so powerful, but and it's, again, this is such a deeply biblical idea. You know, this is the biblical revolution, whenever you see that, like, when I'm reading this to my daughter, I'm literally weeping because it's me, there's just nothing more powerful than this, this message of that, God, we're all messed up people, we've all done wrong. We've all heard other people and God Himself and He forgives us. And then he takes the penalty, right? Because, you know, there, there does need to be retribution. And he says, I'll take that retribution on myself. There's, it's so powerful, it's really, to me, it's revolutionary, and, but but it's also requires supernatural power in some way, you know, and it's kind of like Alcoholics Anonymous, you know, begins with you can't deal with this on your own, you're gonna need a higher power. I think there's something about that with this issue of hatred as well. So when when we've been so deeply wounded, you know, just such deep injustice is that people in your film, you know, have been, you know, so I just