I mean again, yeah, we can go ahead and sacrifice the ones that are positive, ’cause they’re gonna die anyway, and probably better to go ahead and put them to sleep than to go through, you know, deteriorating and emaciation and eventual death. But I went to the director, and Bob Briggs was the director at that time. He was the PR guy. And I said, “Bob, here’s our problem. We can go ahead, these have Johne’s disease, mouflon and Barbary sheep, aoudads, they’re not in danger. They’re, (scoffing) they’re a dime a dozen. I mean, you can get a lot of them all over the place.” And you know I said, “But if this starts to spread to all the aurochs and kudu and giraffe and okapi and everything else that we have at the zoo,” which they’re all in the same, close to the same area, and they kinda drain together. I said, “Our best approach is just to eliminate that whole herd of, you know, 30 animals.