I just think that, as directors, we kind of took our eye off the ball. And so you wake up one morning and when you say, you know, or your curator comes in and says, you know, “We’ve got to, old Rocky, our male lion who’s 16 years old is probably gonna have to be euthanized. And by the way, I don’t know if we can get a male lion, or if we do, it’s gonna take three or four years.” And directors were like, “What?” You know, that’s crazy. And it happened a lot, happened with a lot. And I’m out of the profession. I don’t know how things are going now, but when you talk about what should the focus of that collection be, I don’t know that in the future you’re gonna have a lot of say-so in it. It’s gonna be what’s available. So I use this term called the homogenization of zoos, where maybe 10, 15, 20 years from now, you go to the San- Maybe not San Diego, but you go to the Sedgwick County Zoo in Wichita, you go to Audubon Park Zoo in New Orleans, you go to Riverbanks Zoo in Columbia, and you see the same animals.