And by the way, Nick and I started out hating each other, and we had a couple of political alliances over the years, and then when Nick refused to lie about me, when several of my close friends lied about me—they didn't lie about me, they just kind of ganged up with the mob, 'cause they were scared and they were blackmailed and they were threatened—Nick had the most to benefit from lying about me, and refused to. And to me, that was integrity and that was character. And um... and there were other people who are strong voices and personalities, and they're basically tweeting one thing and then calling our mutual friends and saying, "Tell Ali, you know, we'd still love to have him over." It just... I gotta tell you, living through that experience, especially after January 6 where I already saw it, and to some extent it was explainable because you have the whole of the federal government trying to persecute me. But this wasn't. This was a fake Christian, Jewish, pederast. Someone who had publicly advocated pedophilia—publicly—and said that it was a good developmental experience for 13-year-old boys. Who said that he walked in while Jewish producers, and other producers, white producers, were molesting young men in Hollywood, and he wouldn't turn these older men in to the police and he's never publicized their names. That person accused me of... all sorts of things. It was mainly through implication. They wanted people to imagine that, um, I did something worse than... have people have conversations with me in which, okay, they didn't disclose their age, and once they disclosed their age, the conversation winds down. It's off. And, um... you know, so anyway. That, to me, said a lot. Because again, I watched this guy from afar, basically not willing to say "Zionist," not willing to say "Israeli," say "Jew," and then took that same character of principle, and same kind of realizing you have to say the wholeness of what you're saying, in not lying about me. Which is, it's kind of weird to describe a negative, but, um, it was just... that's what happens during these type of lynch mobs is, um... is like, participation is just kind of required. You know? You stay in the in-crowd by participating. You don't have to believe anything, you just have to participate a little bit. And you know, René Girard talks about this kind of ritualistic sacrifice that is native to our state...