There’s no way you can’t fumble it. You can’t sort of get around it by all sorts of lame excuses that, oh, I, you know, I we we will find them another home. It’s, it’s absolutely critical that if, if there is nowhere good for those animals to go, then it, it is better, sadly better at the end of the day that those animals are put down. But a very good, very good example going on right now with, with elephants, where you’ve got two very good one in particular very good sanctuaries that are able to take elephants that are no longer either, can’t be kept well or are ancient and, and, you know, have problems. I world welfare, one of the board members of wild welfare US is the director of the Tennessee Elephant Sanctuary. And I would challenge anybody to go to that place, roughly 3000 acres. Elephants are kept under the most amazing conditions. And so that’s one, that’s one species or two, three species, however you argue it, where there are homes and there are plenty of spaces for those.