And I will also tell you the technically, we do not have a date by which we must open the permanent. Though the way the law is written in Illinois, there is an outside date at which we can operate the temporary. And that outside date is April of 2027. So we would like to open the permanent by August of 2027, because we have 600 employees, and we wanna transition them very smoothly over. We probably spent $5 or $10 million hiring and training those employees. And if we ended up opening let's say, October 2027, we'd end up paying a bunch of employees for not working. And if we were a bigger delay than that, you might be faced with laying people off and trying to hire them back later, which we'd rather not do. Now I think if we had to, we could go to legislature and get the law changed. We already did that once because of the Potawatomi lawsuit. We pay over $20 million a year of gaming taxes, and, of course, we employ a lot of people. And so nobody wants us to have a gap between the temporary and the permanent. And as long as we work diligently, we should be able to build this inside of two years. That's about the time frame that Penn is spending to build their place in Aurora. It's about how long it took, the Seminoles to build their place in Rockford. Our place is similar in size and scale to those. And so that's where we're going. But I back when the bond market fell apart when tariffs were first mentioned, I started thinking, okay. What do I do if I can't get the money in the next, you know, eighteen months? And the answer is you go back to the legislature and get the law changed. And you just run the company as is, and we would actually generate more cash flow and have to borrow less so that it wouldn't be the worst thing in the world. And then in terms of, like, construction price, you know, when you when you look at the whole budget, which is $325 million, it basically breaks into thirds. About a third of that, a little less than a third of it, is soft cost, things like capitalized interests and design fees and that sort of thing. About a third of it is actual material. And that's where, like, the price of steel comes into play. But steel's a relatively small part of the overall price material. I mean, there's a lot of concrete in the building, for example, and electrical wiring and stuff like that. And, you know, one of the things about tariffs is, like, well, just like Apple said, they're importing iPhones now from India as many as they can. Well, I'll bet if you live in India and you buy an iPhone, you're gonna get one from China. And so there are all sorts of ways around this. If you don't wanna pay a 45% tariff out of China, well, those phones go to India, and then we get phones from India. Or somebody goes down to Mar A Lago, kisses the ring, and then they decide that, oh, iPhones don't have to pay tariffs, which is what they did do. So we're kind of watching this. But the price of steel is that's the one thing that clearly jumped, and it jumped as soon as they put a tariff on foreign steel. That's a relatively modest part of the project. The other third is the labor. All the electricians and carpenters and so on that it takes to actually build this. And while that it's a union job, so the wages are somewhat set, nevertheless, you will get better efficiency. In a recession than you would normally. You'll and so the subcontractors would be a little hungrier if there's less being built. And so, if all this tumult results in a recession, we may benefit from that more the cost of construction. Than it would impact us in our normal operations. Know, we operate these regional casinos. We're a cheap vacation. And so when you hit a recession, people might be hesitant to come to Las Vegas. Certainly, Canadians are hesitant to come to Las Vegas. We don't get any Canadians in our places. And, you know, the dollar is down, so it's about 10% more expensive to go to Europe now than it was four months ago. And so if people stay home and do domestic vacations instead of going to Europe, that would benefit us. And so I think we're in pretty good shape relative to the tumult that's going out there in the world. I mean, what I prefer that everything be stable? Of course, I would. But when you look at the choppy terrain, I think we're in pretty good shape for. So I'm sorry. You answered a simple question. We gave you a fifteen-minute answer. So my goal, Jordan, was to leave things for people to ask questions about.