Yeah. So I don't I don't focus on the appropriate reaction. I focus on, how do we create a culture of empathy, which is, how do we create holistic empathy between all the participants, because that creates the container for working through all those different issues. And so my approach would be, how do we bring those two parties into an empathy circle, so that they can listen to each other? And how do we create a space where the like the the Jewish community, the progressive community, are doing empathy circles within their own communities too. And how do we bring the different parties, different communities, together in empathy circles? And the empathy circle is only sort of like a minimal viable structure, right? It's like, it's the minimal kind of a process that can kind of hold, you know, do a lot towards holding an empathic base. So again, it would be the the Jewish person talking about, we've been persecuted, and with the progressive saying. So I'm hearing that you have been the Jews have been persecuted, and that's really important to you, and then you just keep the dialog going. And it's through that being willing to listen to each other that that you get develop, trust develops, and then that people start understanding where the other person is coming from, and start creating some, you know, common understanding. So with the, with the we take this empathy tent. We did take it out to different places. And we took it out to a right wing, uh, rally in Sacramento, you know, back when Trump was first elected, and we were just listening to, you know, the field would come from there. And then we had five identity Europa members come to the tent, and identity Europa are the guys that were wearing had tiki torches in Charlottesville, right, right. So they have the kind of khaki pants and and so five of them came, and we were talking to him, and my friend, who's Jewish, was talking with, kind of the leader of the group, and I overheard them, you know, it's getting a bit tense. They were talking about the Holocaust. And so I turned and I said, Oh, we, we in their Holocaust deniers, right? Try to deny the Holocaust. I said, we here. We do empathy circles. So I got them both into an empathy circle. The guy said a few, you know, some things, and then my friend reflected back what he was saying. Then it was his turn to speak, and the topic was, what does the Holocaust mean to you? And he said, The Holocaust means that half my family in Austria were killed and the other half were spread around the world, you know, as refugees. And then the the the identity Europa guy, he couldn't reflect that. He said, Oh, he tried to, I say something else. And then my friend said, No, this is he repeated again. And then the guy just couldn't, he couldn't say, you just saying other things. And then it went for four times, you know, he said it, and the guy couldn't. And then his friend, what, who was, uh, sitting next to him, had done the empathy circle longer with somebody else. He said, Just tell him what you heard him say. And he said it. He said, so half your family were killed, and then the other half were spread around around the world. And so my friend said, when he when he finally got heard by that guy, he could feel the difference in himself that the guy finally heard me, right? So it's like you hurt. You heard what I had to say, and you know, you have to take it in some instead of keeping a wall up about it and just trying to rationalize, you know, say other things, he had to take it in to be able to reflect it. And that created, you know, it's you start going deeper in the relationship, in that, in that situation.