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Well I love the cities. You know, you're close to a lot of things. You can ask, you can punch in, you can look up where a lot of things are. There's landmarks everywhere. And so it's friendly for a blind person. Yeah, uh, back prior technology days. Thank God we have all this stuff. I knew, I had a blind friend in the 80s who lived in the woods with his caregiver. Well, the guy fell into some kind of trap and froze to death, right? Because in Ontario, in the woods, there's traps everywhere, right? There's fur traps, bear traps, there's snares everywhere for coyotes, bears, and different things. There's even illegal ones. There's poachers. There's all of that, right? So there's, so it's kind of hard if you, by yourself, to really get around the woods fine. And he was taking care of this guy. So when he passed, it was a whole mess. He didn't even know about it at first that, that, uh, his, his, you know, his man's looking after him, died or whatever. So there was no communication, right? And I was thinking, if something like that happened today, the guy in the trap could have reached out on the phone, got, got rescued. And then, you know, his, his blind friend in one of the cabins there, like far away, could have reached out on a phone, called somebody, why isn't, you know, why is my man's back at home or whatever. So that was one unfortunate situation, prior technology that I kind of remembered. And of course, right? I didn't know all the stuff that we would have now. So I didn't have the what, where of all to say, damn, I wish those people had phones or, or, you know, smartphones or whatever. So I like the cities and also
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