So now I want to talk about Steve Pieczenik for a second. He is a psyop here. I do. Okay. He's a psyop dude. And so Alex is saying that he came on in 2002 to say that Osama bin Laden was dead, and he came out with all this stuff. When you consider it in the context of a psyop operator, a psyoperator. There we go. I was waiting for it. You know, one of the things that happens pretty consistently throughout our wars, like these things happened in Vietnam, in Korea, in World War II, rumors of the leader's death of the other side are a very popular tactic. It's pretty easy to do. It's something that you do hoping that the forces will become disenchanted, their morale will go down, and they won't fight thinking that their leader has been killed. Absolutely. You drop fucking leaflets. Exactly. You see this over and over again throughout the history of war. Right. And so the idea that Steve Pieczenik, a psyop guy, is coming onto Alex Jones' show and saying this traditional war psyop language. Yeah. It leads me to believe that that's what he was up to. Now, the problem when you're working with terrorist organizations and you're working with these nebulous groups like Al-Qaeda was in the early 2000s, they weren't fighting for bin Laden. They were fighting for ideology. They were fighting against us. They were fighting against murder. Right. Against themselves being murdered. Exactly. And so the idea that even if this psyop was successful and these terrorists did think bin Laden was dead, that would not stop them from the crusade they were on or from the war that they were in the middle of. Again, he would just be a martyr. That's a flashpoint. The only end result of this psyop that I believe Steve Pieczenik was running is to make Americans distrustful of their own government, which I don't know if that was the intended consequence or an unfortunate consequence, but it certainly bears out on Infowars.