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All right, not hearing anybody. I guess I got everybody that round, even though some of you got stepped on. Apologize for that. But I'm going to go with Darrell first. Sorry about that, Art. I'm going to take Darrell first, because usually, I know he didn't say short time, but usually he's got a whole bunch of things to do. But Darrell, V01UKV. Good morning there, Darrell. And what is the most dangerous thing you've ever done, whether you realize it or not? What is the most dangerous thing you've ever done? Over to you there, Darrell. Darrell, good morning. Yeah, thank you, Joe. I was not short time today, but I won't hold it very long anyway. I'd say the most dangerous thing I ever did was take my job in Uganda back in the day. I worked for the Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs back in the early to mid 2000s, and they sent me to Uganda, Kampala particularly. And back then, in the early 2000s, Uganda was not the safest place in the world. And I had an AK-47 put to my chest. I was called Muzungu, which means like white devil in Swahili. The level of racism against Westerners back then was incredibly high. It was dangerous, man. It really was. And I wasn't military. I was civilian. And we were stationed pretty much to basically defend for ourselves. We didn't have military protection or government escorts or any of that kind of stuff. We were basically living just on the outskirts of the city in a guarded university campus. Granted, they had guards on the walls and stuff like that around the campus where we were living. But when we had to go to work in the morning, it was on us to get where we were going and get back safely. And when we were eating lunch or we were eating dinner story in this cafe style place, like a pool hall that had a restaurant. And that's where we were eating supper every day. Let me reset one.

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