So, I mean, what's happening is Big Pharma is orchestrating a plan to green public support for in theory, weight stigma prevention, but in reality, political power to try to convince the US government in particular, but also other governments around the world, to include weight loss, drugs and other procedures in whatever their national insurance programs are. So here in the US, they're trying to get these drugs covered by Medicare. And they're trying to get these drugs covered by Medicare, because that would give a huge amount of access to many, many people who can't afford the drugs at their list price now, and we're talking about the, the GLP, one agonist drugs, the you know, people know it as ozempic ozempic is actually a diabetes drug. And we'll go V, which is the same drug as it was a big essentially, but is approved at a higher dose specifically for the purpose of weight loss is actually the weight loss drug, but I feel like like that horse is out of the bar, people just know it as ozempic They're gonna call every brands, every pharmaceutical companies drug ozempic, they're gonna call it you know, it's like, Kleenex, right? Like, you just did what is called now, but, but it's not actually was. But anyway, there, you know, if you can get when you read articles or headlines, because let's face it, some of us only read the headlines, sometimes about how many billions and billions of dollars ozempic is going to make in the next, you know, five to seven years, part of that calculation is based on the idea that national healthcare systems, the NHS in Britain and Medicare in the US will be covering the drug, and that not only will that open up that market, it will also force private insurance companies to have to cover the drug. And so then you got everybody's insurance covering the drugs, right now, there's a limited amount of weight loss, procedure, pharmaceuticals, therapy, whatever, that are covered by most insurance programs, if any, your insurance might not cover anything at all related to weight loss. And yeah, and just as just as Vinny warned that, like, I probably will use the the old words here in in the context of protesting these things, right, I always tell people that there are three situations in which I will use the words one is to talk about the rapper, Heavy D, who called himself the overweight lover and who is iconic and amazing. So, I will use us overweight LeBrons in the house talk about having, I will use the word obesity in terms of like a sort of middle fingers up to the concept of glorifying obesity and then actually glorifying myself as, as a labeled as obese person. So I will use it in that context. And then I will use it in critique of the systems that have medicalized body size, and use it as the disease label. So in a conversation like this, like, I'm not going to use it to talk about myself, I'm not gonna be like, as a person living with obesity, blah, blah, blah. But in the, in the context of talking about these, I'm just gonna say it and also just want to be clear that in the context of talking about the coverage of weight loss, anything, anything that's kind of labeled weight management, which we would actually activist fat advocates would actually call that weight cycling, not weight management, but the medical industrial complex calls it weight management, I'm going to use that term So as we talk about it a little bit, but just know our process of that term. When we talk about weight management possibilities, or at least the things that are presented to us that way as weight management possibilities, it is for me as a fat liberationists. And for me as the person, you know, guiding Nafa, we hold the fat liberationist belief in body autonomy, which means everybody has the right to make the decision to pursue weight loss if they choose to in their body. And we're not trying to prevent you. Like, I'm not trying to automatically prevent anyone from from pursuing intentional weight loss, what we are trying to do is make sure that you are doing that with truly informed consent. And your consent is not informed, if most of the things you are being told about what obesity is, as a disease are, are presented to you at the orchestration of people who benefit from selling you things to treat that disease. So, so like these, these so called weight loss drug is right, or at least Yeah, they make people lose weight. So they are weight loss drugs that is accurate. And you know, and other kinds of drugs being abused as weight loss drugs. But they're like the presentation of them as a solution to all your health problems, without adequately presenting to almost any of you, the potential complications to your health problems that are caused by them is part of the problem. And so here we go back to the right to obesity care organization. This is an umbrella organization that is led by the National Consumer Alliance and the National Council on Aging here in the US. And they launched earlier this week, and obesity Bill of Rights. So folks might be familiar with the concept of a patient's bill of rights, which is like a list of like, this is how your doctor should not engage in conflict, dealing with your health, basically, you know, you deserve to be treated with respect, you deserve to be given appropriate information to make the decisions that you need to make about your health, you deserve to, you know, have coverage of the procedures that you need to have a say in what procedures are being done to you like, it's that kind of stuff, right. And I think the first Patient's Bill of Rights came out in the 70s. And then there are all of these sort of like, you know, similarly structured kind of bills of rights Nafa had a house had a health care bill of rights, I actually probably will put it up on on our website, again, in the wake of all this nonsense, just as evidence that like, we cared about this, because we've always cared about fat people. We didn't just care about what we recognize the fact people are an even bigger market than we thought they were. Right. But