Well, I’m really caught in kind of a quagmire to answer that because back in the ’80s and ’90s when these exhibits were really coming to fruition where all the zoos were building open exhibits, or like they were building indoor immersion exhibits, spending a lot of money on them and it wasn’t a lot of money, but today, to build those same exhibits, you’re talking about exhibits that are running into over 0.5 a million, $50 million or more. And in some cases over $100 million, which is a huge amount of money to spend on an exhibit for people to come through that really don’t appreciate it to the extent that they should, I guess because of the amount of money that’s been spent on it When what zoos purport to do is they’re saving dangerous species for the future. And wildlife is being eradicated at such a rapid rate now that there’s no way zoos are gonna be able to stop that. And even with the re-introduction programs, you can’t reintroduce animals now to these countries where they’re being eradicated at a high rate. And whether it’s elephants or rhinos or pangolins or species of reptiles or amphibians and turtles, it’s happening so fast that the money that’s being spent today in zoos on exhibits to get people to come into the zoos because now they’re losing visitation because their collections have dropped off. So they have to depend on new exhibits or new rides or whatever. I mean, we just put a carousel at national. I mean, that would never have been even considered years ago.